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{{short description|English clergyman and philanthropist (1607–1638)}}
{{About|the namesake of Harvard College|''John Harvard'', the statue in Harvard Yard|John Harvard (statue)|other uses|John Harvard (disambiguation)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2012}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2020}}
{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = John Harvard
| honorific_prefix = [[The Reverend]]
| image = BostonTrip-91.jpg
| name = John Harvard
| image = John Harvard statue.jpg
| caption = [[John Harvard (statue)|John Harvard statue]], [[Harvard Yard]]<!--please forgo mentioning in caption that statue isn't a likeness of JH. Article explains that, and many statues honoring figures from history aren't modeled on those persons for the same reason: no one knows what they looked like. It's silly to fuss about it in the caption -->
| caption = The [[John Harvard (statue)|John Harvard statue]], by [[Daniel Chester French]] (1884)<!--please forgo mentioning in caption that statue isn't a likeness of JH. Article explains that, and many statues honoring figures from history aren't modeled on those persons for the same reason: no one knows what they looked like. It's silly to fuss about it in the caption -->
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1607|11|26}}
| birth_date = {{birth_date|df=y|1607|11|29}} (baptised)<ref>{{cite DNB |volume=25 |wstitle=Harvard, John |first=Henry Richard |last=Tedder |pages=77–78}}</ref>
| birth_place = [[Southwark]], England
| birth_place = [[Southwark]], [[Surrey]], England
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1638|9|14|1607|11|26}}
| death_date = {{death_date|df=y|1638|09|14}} (aged 30)
| death_cause = [[Tuberculosis]]
| death_cause = [[Tuberculosis]]
| death_place = [[Charlestown, Boston|Charlestown]], [[Massachusetts]]
| death_place = [[Charlestown, Boston|Charlestown]], [[Massachusetts Bay Colony]]
| occupation = Pastor
| occupation = [[Pastor]]
| known_for = Benefactor and namesake of Harvard College
| known_for = A founder of [[Harvard College]]
| spouse =
| children = None
| spouse = Ann Sadler
| children = None<!--When someone leaves the bulk of their estate to charity, their childlessness becomes a useful data point-->
| alma_mater = [[Emmanuel College, Cambridge]] <!-- need cite -->
| alma_mater = [[Emmanuel College, Cambridge]] ([[Bachelor of Arts|BA]], [[Master of Arts|MA]])
| signature = JohnHarvard Signature.jpg
}}
}}
'''John Harvard''' (1607{{ndash}}<!--dates are years-only here by consensus. If you want to change that, open a discussion on the talk page-->1638) was an English [[Dissenter|dissenting minister]] in [[Colonial history of the United States|colonial]] [[New England]] whose
[[File:John Harvard Tablet, Emmanuel College.jpg|thumb|right|Tablets, [[Emmanuel College, Cambridge|Emmanuel College]] chapel]]
deathbed{{r|HMagJanFeb2000}}
'''John Harvard''' (26 November 1607 – 14 September 1638) was an English minister in America,
bequest to the
<!--it pleased God to stir up the heart of one Mr. Harvard, -->"a godly gentleman and a lover of learning",<!-- ... to give the one half of his estate ... towards the erecting of a college and all his Library."--><ref>Samuel Eliot Morison, ''The founding of Harvard College'' (1936) Appendix D, and pp 304-5</ref>
<!--DO NOT REMOVE THE HIDDEN COMMENTS WARNING PEOPLE NOT TO "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES. EXPERIENCE SHOWS THEY'RE NEEDED BECAUSE, DUH, PEOPLE KEEP "FIXING" DIRECT QUOTES-->
whose deathbed<ref name="HMagJanFeb2000">
{{Sic|hide=y|<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES--><!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->"sch<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->o<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->a<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->l<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->e<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES--> or colle<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->d<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->ge"<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->}}
Conrad Edick Wright, [http://harvardmagazine.com/2000/01/john-harvard.html John Harvard: Brief life of a Puritan philanthropist] ''Harvard Magazine''. January–February, 2000.
founded two years earlier by the [[Massachusetts Bay Colony]] was so gratefully received that it was consequently ordered
"By the time the Harvards settled in Charlestown John must already have been in failing health ... Consumption kills slowly. By the time Harvard died, he knew what he wanted to do with his estate."
"that the
</ref>
<!--DO NOT REMOVE THE HIDDEN COMMENTS WARNING PEOPLE NOT TO "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES. EXPERIENCE SHOWS THEY'RE NEEDED BECAUSE, DUH, PEOPLE KEEP "FIXING" DIRECT QUOTES-->
bequest to the
<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->{{Sic|hide=y|"schoale or Colledge"}}<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->
{{Sic|hide=y|<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->Co<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->ll<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->e<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->d<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->g<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->e<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->}}
recently undertaken by the [[Massachusetts Bay Colony]] was so gratefully received that it was consequently ordered
{{Sic|hide=y|"that the
<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->Colledge<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->
agreed upon formerly to
agreed upon formerly to
<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->bee<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->
<!--DO NOT REMOVE THE HIDDEN COMMENTS WARNING PEOPLE NOT TO "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES. EXPERIENCE SHOWS THEY'RE NEEDED BECAUSE, DUH, PEOPLE KEEP "FIXING" DIRECT QUOTES-->
{{Sic|hide=y|<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->b<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->e<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->}}
built at
built at
<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->Cambridg shalbee<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->
<!--DO NOT REMOVE THE HIDDEN COMMENTS WARNING PEOPLE NOT TO "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES. EXPERIENCE SHOWS THEY'RE NEEDED BECAUSE, DUH, PEOPLE KEEP "FIXING" DIRECT QUOTES-->
{{Sic|hide=y|<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->[[Cambridge, Massachusetts|Cambr<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->i<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->d<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->ge<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->]] sha<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->l<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->b<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->e<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->e<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->}}
called [[Harvard College|Harvard
called [[Harvard College|Harvard
{{Sic|hide=y|<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->Co<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->ll<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->e<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->d<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->g<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->e<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->}}]]."{{r|charter}} John Harvard was born in [[Southwark]], England. A graduate of [[Emmanuel College, Cambridge|Emmanuel College]] of the [[ University of Cambridge]], he emigrated to [[New England]] in 1637. [[Harvard University]] considers him the most honored of its founders—those whose efforts and contributions in its early days "ensure[d] its permanence"—and a [[Statue of John Harvard|statue in his honor]] is a prominent feature of [[Harvard Yard]].
<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->Colledge]]."}}<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->{{thinsp}}<ref name=charter>
[http://hlcra.harvard.edu/files/harvardcharter.pdf The Charter of the President and Fellows of Harvard College]{{dead link|date=January 2014}}
</ref>


==Life==
==Life==

===Early life===
===Early life===
[[File:Harvard House Stratford (5665088336).jpg|thumb|Harvard House in [[Stratford-upon-Avon]]; the childhood home of John Harvard's mother Katherine Rogers]]
Harvard was born and raised in [[Southwark]], England, the fourth of nine children of Robert Harvard (1562–1625), a butcher and tavern owner, and his wife Katherine Rogers (1584–1635), a native of [[Stratford-upon-Avon]] whose father, Thomas Rogers (1540–1611), was an associate of [[William Skakespeare|Shakespeare's]] father, both serving on the borough corporation's council. He was baptised in the parish church of St Saviour's (now [[Southwark Cathedral]])<ref name=guide>{{cite book |title=Southwark Cathedral – The authorised Guide |first=Guy |last=Rowston |year=2006}}</ref> and attended [[St Saviour's Grammar School]], where his father was a member of the governing body as being also a Warden of the Parish Church.
Harvard was born and raised in [[Southwark]], [[Surrey]], England, (now part of [[London]]), the fourth of nine children of Robert Harvard (1562–1625), a butcher and tavern owner, and his wife Katherine Rogers (1584–1635), a native of [[Stratford-upon-Avon]]. Her father, Thomas Rogers (1540–1611), served on the borough corporation's council with [[John Shakespeare]].{{cn|date=March 2020}} Harvard was baptised in St Saviour's Church (now [[Southwark Cathedral]]){{r|guide}} and attended [[St Saviour's Grammar School]], where his father was a member of the governing body and a [[Churchwarden|warden of the parish church]]. His grandparents' house in Stratford-upon-Avon, largely rebuilt after a fire of 1595, survives as 'Harvard House'.<ref>
{{National Heritage List for England|num=1298524|desc=Harvard House|access-date=15 March 2020|grade=I}}</ref>


In 1625, the [[bubonic plague|plague]] reduced the immediate family to only John, his brother Thomas, and their mother.<!-- unclear how many of original 9 died of plague vs earlier deaths --> Katherine was soon remarried—firstly in 1626 to John Elletson (1580–1626), who died within a few months, then (1627) to [[Richard Yarward|Richard Yearwood]]<!--what's with the two spellings? He spelled his own name both ways --> (1580–1632). She died in 1635, Thomas in 1637.
In 1625, [[bubonic plague]] reduced the immediate family to only John, his brother Thomas, and Katherine.<!-- unclear how many of original nine died of plague vs earlier deaths --> Katherine was soon remarried{{mdashb}}firstly in 1626 to John Elletson (1580–1626), who died within a few months, then (1627) to [[Richard Yarward|Richard Yearwood]]<!--what's with the two spellings? He spelled his own name both ways --> (1580–1632). She died in 1635, Thomas in 1637.


===Education and ordination===
Left with some property,<!--working from memory here, but I believe she got this property from one of the husbands -->
Left with some property,<!--working from memory here, but I believe she got this property from one of the husbands -->
Harvard's mother was able to send him to the [[University of Cambridge]],{{r|acab}} He was admitted as a [[Commoner (academia)|pensioner]] to [[Emmanuel College, Cambridge]], on 19 December 1627; he was awarded his [[Bachelor of Arts|B.A.]] in 1632 and [[Master of Arts (Oxford, Cambridge, and Dublin)|M.A.]] in 1635.{{r|acad}} He subsequently ministered in the church at [[Charlestown, Boston|Charlestown, Massachusetts]], though it is not known whether he was ever episcopally ordained.{{r|emma}}
Harvard's mother was able to send him to [[Emmanuel College, Cambridge]],<ref name=acab/>
where he earned his [[Bachelor of Arts|B.A.]] in 1632<ref>{{acad |id=HRVT627J |name=Harvard, John}}</ref> and [[Master of Arts|M.A.]] in 1635,<ref name=emma>[http://www.emma.cam.ac.uk/about/famous/index.cfm?id=4 Emmanuel College: John Harvard] Retrieved 2012-05-01</ref><!--no doubt a better cite can be found--> and was subsequently ordained a [[dissenting minister]].<ref name=acab>{{Cite Appletons'|wstitle=Harvard, John|year=1892}}</ref>


===Marriage and career===
===Marriage and career===
On 19 April of either 1636 or 1637,<!--see note a bit to the right of here--> Harvard married Ann Sadler (1614–55) of [[Patcham]] in [[East Sussex]], sister of his college contemporary [[John Sadler (Town Clerk of London)|John Sadler]], at St Michael the Archangel Church, in the parish of South Malling, [[Lewes]].<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=PQMdzhnfaSwC&dq=john+harvard+married+ann+sadler+lewes&pg=PA212|title= The Founding of Harvard College|date=1995|first= Samuel Eliot |last=Morison|publisher= Harvard University Press|isbn= 9780674314511|accessdate=24 August 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wN2rznjAbdsC&q=john+harvard+married&pg=PA326|title=The New England Historical and Genealogical Register,: Volume 39 1885|first=John Ward|last= Dean|date=July 1996|publisher=Heritage Books |isbn=9780788404986|access-date=4 April 2020}}</ref><!--These two sources conflict on year of marriage; post-1910 sources will be more authoritative-->
In 1636, he married Ann Sadler (1614–55) of [[Ringmer]], sister of his college classmate [[John Sadler (town clerk)|John Sadler]].


In the spring or summer of 1637, the couple emigrated to [[New England]], where Harvard became a [[Freeman (Colonial)|freeman]] of Massachusetts and,<ref name=acab/> settling in [[Charlestown, Boston|Charlestown]], a teaching elder of the First Church there<ref name=melnick>{{cite web|last=Melnick|first=Arseny James|title=Celebrating the Life and Times of JOHN HARVARD|url=http://www.johnharvard.us/|accessdate=20 September 2011}}</ref> and an assistant preacher.<ref name=emma /> In 1638, a tract of land was deeded{{clarify|date=March 2012}} to him there, and he was appointed that same year to a committee “to consider of some things tending toward a body of laws.”<ref name=acab/> {{clarify|date=March 2012}}
In the spring or summer of 1637, the couple emigrated to the [[New England Colonies]], where Harvard became a [[Freeman (Colonial)|freeman]] of Massachusetts{{r|acab}} and, settling in [[Charlestown, Boston|Charlestown]], a [[Elder (Presbyterian)|teaching elder]] of the First Church there{{r|melnick}} and an assistant preacher.{{r|emma}} In 1638, a tract of land was deeded{{clarify|date=March 2012}} to him there, and he was appointed that same year to a committee "to consider of some things tending toward a body of laws."{{r|acab}}{{clarify|date=March 2012}}


He built his house on Country Road (later Market Street and now Main Street), next to Gravel Lane, a site that is now [[John Harvard Mall]]. His orchard extended up the hill behind his house.{{r|charlestown}}
===Death===
On 14 September 1638, he died of [[tuberculosis]] and was buried at Charlestown's [[Phipps Street Burying Ground]]. In 1828, Harvard University alumni erected a granite monument to his memory there,<ref name=acab/><ref name=Everett>{{Cite book|author=Edward Everett|title=Orations and speeches on various occasions|volume=I|location=Boston|publisher=Charles C. Little and James Brown|year=1850|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=St5DAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA185|pages=185–189}}</ref> his original stone having disappeared during the [[American Revolutionary War|American Revolution]].<ref name=melnick/>


==Benefactor of Harvard College==
===Founding of Harvard College===
{{multiple image
{{multiple image
| footer = Tablets outside Harvard Yard's [[Johnston Gate]]. The tablet on the left (above) quotes from a longer history which continues, "And as we were thinking and consulting how to effect this great work, it pleased God to stir up the heart of one Mr. Harvard (a godly gentleman and a lover of learning, there living among us) to give the one-half of his estate (it being in all about 1700{{nbsp}}£) toward the erecting of a college, and all his library. After him, another gave 300{{nbsp}}£; others after them cast in more; and the public hand of the state added the rest."{{hsp}}{{r|fruits}}
| footer = Tablets outside Harvard Yard's [[Johnston Gate]]
| width = 390 | align = left
| width = 390 | align = center
| image1 = New England's First Fruits plaque, Harvard University - IMG 8969.JPG
| image1 = New England's First Fruits plaque, Harvard University - IMG 8969.JPG
| width1 = {{#expr: (145* 510/655) round 0 }}
| width1 = {{#expr: (145* 510/655) round 0 }}
| image2 = Harvard Colledge plaque, Harvard University - IMG 8970.JPG
| image2 = Harvard Colle<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->dge plaque, Harvard University - IMG 8970.JPG
| width2 = {{#expr: (145 *935 / 665) round 0}}
| width2 = {{#expr: (145 *935 / 665) round 0}}
}}
}}
[[File:John Harvard on stained glass window, Emmanuel College.jpg|thumb|right|Emmanuel College window (1884) depicting John Harvard on left]]<!-- is there some way to join the tablet and window images over a single caption? -->
[[File:John Harvard on stained glass window, Emmanuel College.jpg|thumb|right|[[Emmanuel College, Cambridge|Emmanuel College]] window (1884) depicting John Harvard on left]]<!-- is there some way to join the tablet and window images over a single caption? -->
[[File:John Harvard Tablet, Emmanuel College.jpg|thumb|upright=1|right|Tablets, Emmanuel College chapel]]
{{clear left}}
{{clear left}}
Two years before Harvard's death the [[Massachusetts Bay Colony]]—desiring to "advance learning and perpetuate it to posterity: dreading to leave an illiterate ministry to the churches, when our present ministers shall lie in the dust"—appropriated [[Pound sterling|£]]400 toward a "schoale or colledge"<ref name=charter/> at what was then called Newtowne.<ref>''New England's First Fruits'' (1643). http://books.google.com/books?id=gXkFAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA16</ref>
Two years before Harvard's death the [[Massachusetts General Court|Great and General Court of the Massachu{{shy}}setts Bay Colony]]{{mdashb}}desiring to "advance learning and perpetuate it to posterity: dreading to leave an illiterate ministry to the churches, when our present ministers shall lie in the dust"{{mdashb}}appropriated [[Pound sterling|£]]400 toward a "scho<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->ale or colle<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->dge"{{r|charter}} at what was then called Newtowne.{{r|fruits}}
In an oral will spoken to his wife<ref name=Crimson1984>
In an oral will spoken to his wife{{r|Crimson1984}} the childless Harvard, who had inherited considerable sums from his father, mother, and brother,{{r|grads}}
bequeathed to the school [[Pound sterling|£]]780{{mdashb}}half of his monetary estate (equivalent to £{{formatnum:{{Inflation|UK|780|1638|r=2}}}} today) {{mdashb}}with the remainder to his wife.{{r|guide}}
Callan, Richard L. [http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1984/4/28/100-dears-of-solitude-pthe-john/ 100 Dears of Solitude: John Harvard Finishes His First Century]. ''The Harvard Crimson''. April 28, 1984. Retrieved October 13, 2012</ref> the childless Harvard, who had inherited considerable sums from his father, mother, and brother,{{Citation needed|date=September 2011}}<!--http://www.nndb.com/people/508/000116160/ -->
This bequest was roughly equal to the Massachusetts Bay Colony's annual tax receipts.{{refn|{{cite book|last=Foster|first= Margery Somers |title="Out of smalle beginings..."{{hsp}}: An Economic History of Harvard College in the Puritan Period (1636 to 1712)|publisher= Belknap Press of Harvard University Press|year= 1962|page=6}} }}
bequeathed to the school [[Pound sterling|£]]780 (half of his monetary estate, with the remainder to his wife)<ref name=guide/> as well as&mdash;and perhaps more importantly<ref name=potter>Alfred C. Potter, [http://books.google.com/books?id=yRsUAAAAIAAJ "The College Library."] ''Harvard Illustrated Magazine,'' vol. IV no. 6, March 1903, pp. 105&ndash;112.<!-- see also article at p.133ff -->

</ref>&mdash;his 320-volume scholar's library.<ref name=acab/>
Perhaps more importantly{{r|potter1}} he also gave his scholar's library comprising some 329 titles (totaling 400 volumes, some titles being multivolume works).{{r|potter2|p=192}}
It was subsequently ordered "that the
In gratitude, it was subsequently ordered "that the
<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->Colledge<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->
{{Sic|hide=y|<!--DO-->Co<!--NOT-->ll<!--"FIX"-->ed<!--DIRECT-->g<!--QUOTES-->e<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->}}
agreed upon formerly to
agreed upon formerly to
<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->bee<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->
{{Sic|hide=y|<!--DO NOT-->b<!--"FIX"-->e<!--DIRECT-->e<!--QUOTES--><!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->}}
built at
built at
<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->Cambridg shalbee<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->
{{Sic|hide=y|<!--DO-->Cambrid<!--NOT-->g<!--"FIX"--> sha<!--DIRECT-->lb<!--QUOTES-->ee<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->}}
called [[Harvard College|Harvard
called [[Harvard College|Harvard
<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES -->Colledge]]."<!-- DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES --><ref name=charter/>
{{Sic|hide=y|<!--DO-->Co<!--NOT-->ll<!--"FIX"-->ed<!--DIRECT-->g<!--QUOTES-->e<!--DO NOT "FIX" DIRECT QUOTES-->}}]]."{{px1}}{{r|charter}}
(Even before Harvard's death, Newtowne had been renamed<ref name=charter/> Cambridge, after the English [[University of Cambridge|university]] attended by many early colonists, including Harvard himself.)<ref>{{cite book|last=Degler|first=Carl Neumann|title=Out of Our Pasts: The Forces That Shaped Modern America|publisher=HarperCollins|location=New York|year=1984|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=NebLe1ueuGQC&pg=PA18&lpg=PA18&dq=cambridge+university+puritans+newtowne#v=onepage&q=&f=false|accessdate=20 September 2011 | isbn=978-0-06-131985-3}}</ref><!--[[Emmanuel College, Cambridge]] says 1/3 of first 100 university-educated men in America were from Emmanuel; one would expect about 1/2 of "U" colonists to be Cantabs (cf. Oxonians), but the concentration from Emmanuel is interesting-->
(Even before Harvard's death, Newtowne had been renamed{{r|charter}} Cambridge, after the English [[University of Cambridge|university]] attended by many early colonists, including Harvard himself.){{r|degler}}<!--[[Emmanuel College, Cambridge]] says 1/3 of first 100 university-educated men in America were from Emmanuel; one would expect about 1/2 of "U" colonists to be Cantabs (cf. Oxonians), but the concentration from Emmanuel is interesting-->


===Death===
A statue in Harvard's honor&mdash;not, however, a ''likeness'' of him, there being nothing to indicate what he had looked like<ref name=emma/>&mdash;is a prominent feature of [[Harvard Yard]] (see ''[[John Harvard (statue)|John Harvard statue]]'')
On 14 September 1638, Harvard died of [[tuberculosis]] and was buried at Charlestown's [[Phipps Street Burying Ground]]. In 1828, Harvard University alumni erected a granite monument to his memory there,{{r|acab}}{{r|Everett}} his original stone having disappeared during the [[American Revolutionary War|American Revolution]].{{r|melnick}}
and was featured on a 1986 stamp, part of the United States Postal Service's [[Great Americans series]].<ref>
[http://usstampgallery.com/view.php?id=7e107de3fa1437e84bc766bf7c84641bcd258a7c usstampgallery.com: John Harvard]</ref> A figure representing him also appears in a stained-glass window in the chapel of [[Emmanuel College, Cambridge|Emmanuel College]], [[University of Cambridge]].<ref name=emma/>


Harvard's widow, Ann, is thought to have married [[Thomas Allen (nonconformist)|Thomas Allen]], his successor as the teacher of the Charlestown church. Allen acted as administrator in the execution of Harvard's estate and paid his bequests.<ref>J. Savage, ''A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England'', 4 Vols. (Little, Brown & Co., Boston 1860), I, [https://archive.org/details/agenealogicaldi00unkngoog/page/n56 pp. 36–37] (Internet Archive).</ref>
The [[John Harvard Library]] in Southwark, London, is named in Harvard's honor, as is the [[Harvard Bridge]] that connects Boston to Cambridge.<ref>{{cite book

|last1=Alger |first1=Alpheus B.
==Legacy==
|last2=Matthews |first2=Nathan Jr.
===Founding "myth"===
|title=Harvard Bridge: Boston to Cambridge, March 1892
The Harvard College undergraduate newspaper, ''[[The Harvard Crimson]]'',{{r|crime1934}} as well as what ''Harvard Magazine'' calls "smart<!--"smartass" is the word used in the source -- and it's a serious source, too-->ass" tour guides,{{r|ST}}{{r|toes}}
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=1qQJAAAAIAAJ
commonly assert that John Harvard does not merit the honorific ''founder'', because the Colony's vote creating the institution occurred two years prior to Harvard's bequest.
|accessdate=20 September 2011
But as detailed in a 1934 letter by [[Jerome Davis Greene]], Secretary of the [[Harvard Corporation]], the founding of Harvard College was not the act of one but the work of many; John Harvard is therefore consid{{shy}}ered not ''the'' founder, but rather ''a''{{nbsp}}founder,{{r|morison1}}{{r|mather}} of the school{{mdashb}}though the timeliness and generosity of his contribu{{shy}}tion have made him the most honored of these:
|year=1892 |publisher=Rockwell and Churchill |location=Boston, Massachusetts
{{quote|
|page=14
The quibble over the question whether John Harvard was entitled to be called the Founder of Harvard College seems to me one of the least profitable. The destruc{{shy}}tion of myths is a legiti{{shy}}mate sport, but its only justifica{{shy}}tion is the establish{{shy}}ment of truth in place of error.
}}</ref><!--- and there's a town, and roads, and taverns, and alcolholic bevereges, and... -->

If the founding of a universi{{shy}}ty must be dated to a split second of time, then the founding of Harvard should perhaps be fixed by the fall of the presi{{shy}}dent's gavel in announc{{shy}}ing the passage of the vote of 28 October, 1636. But if the founding is to be regarded as a process rather than as a single event [then John Harvard, by virtue of his bequest "at the very threshold of the College's existence and going further than any other contribu{{shy}}tion made up to that time to ensure its permanence"] is clearly entitled to be consid{{shy}}ered a founder. The General Court{{nbsp}}... acknowl{{shy}}edged the fact by bestowing his name on the College. This was almost two years before the first President took office and four years before the first students were graduated.

These are all familiar facts and it is well that they should be understood by the sons of Harvard. There is no myth to be destroyed.{{r|greene}}
}}

===Memorials and tributes===
[[Image:Harvard Chapel, Southwark Cathedral.jpg|thumb|The Harvard Chapel in [[Southwark Cathedral]]]]
A statue in Harvard's honor—not, however, a 'likeness' of him, there being nothing to indicate what he had looked like{{r|emma}}—is a prominent feature of [[Harvard Yard]] (see ''[[John Harvard (statue)|John Harvard statue]]'') and was featured on a 1986 stamp, part of the United States Postal Service's [[Great Americans series]].{{r|stamp}} A figure representing him also appears in a stained-glass window in the chapel of [[Emmanuel College, Cambridge]].{{r|emma}}{{r|acab}}

The [[John Harvard Library]] in Southwark, London, is named in Harvard's honor, as is the [[Harvard Bridge]] that connects Boston to Cambridge.{{r|alger}}<!--- and there's a town, and roads, and taverns, and alcolholic bevereges, and... -->

In [[Southwark Cathedral]], the Harvard Chapel in the north transept was rebuilt with donations from Harvard graduates and dedicated in 1907. The stained-glass window was designed by the American artist, [[John La Farge]] and given by the US Ambassador, [[Joseph Choate]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://library.bc.edu/lafargeglass/|title=John La Farge Stained Glass in New England: A Digital Guide|website=library.bc.edu}}</ref>


== References ==
== References ==
{{reflist|colwidth=30em}}
{{reflist|30em|refs=

{{refn|name=acab|{{Cite Appletons'|wstitle=Harvard, John|year=1892}} }}

{{refn| name=acad |{{acad |id=HRVT627J |name=Harvard, John}} }}

{{refn|name=alger|{{cite book
|last1=Alger |first1=Alpheus B. |last2=Matthews |first2=Nathan Jr.
|title=Harvard Bridge: Boston to Cambridge, March 1892 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1qQJAAAAIAAJ
|access-date=20 September 2011 |year=1892 |publisher=Rockwell and Churchill |location=Boston, Massachusetts
|page=14
}} }}

{{refn|name=charlestown
|1=[http://charlestownhistoricalsociety.org/history/historic-timeline/ Charlestown Historical Society: Full Historic Timeline]
}}

{{refn|name=degler|{{cite book
|last=Degler|first=Carl Neumann|title=Out of Our Pasts: The Forces That Shaped Modern America|publisher=HarperCollins|location=New York
|year=1984|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NebLe1ueuGQC&pg=PA18|access-date=20 September 2011 | isbn=978-0-06-131985-3
}} }}

{{refn|name=toes|{{cite magazine
|url=http://harvardmagazine.com/1999/05/pump.html|title=The College Pump. Toes Imperiled
|magazine=Harvard Magazine|date=May{{ndash}}June 1999|author=Primus{{nbsp}}V
}} {{open access}} }}

{{refn|name=ST |{{cite book
|last=Shand-Tucci|first=Douglas|title=The Campus Guide: Harvard Universi{{shy}}ty|pages=46{{ndash}}51
|publisher=Princeton Architectural Press|year=2001|isbn=9781568982809|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3g6vmGl0UgwC}}
}}

{{refn|name=emma
|1=[http://www.emma.cam.ac.uk/about/famous/index.cfm?id=4 Emmanuel College: John Harvard] Retrieved 2012-05-01<!--no doubt a better cite can be found-->
}}

{{refn|name=Everett|{{Cite book
|author=Edward Everett|title=Orations and speeches on various occasions|volume=I|location=Boston|publisher=Charles C. Little and James Brown|year=1850|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=St5DAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA185|pages=185–189
}} }}

{{refn|name=fruits|
1=[https://archive.org/stream/NewEnglandsFirstFruitsInRespectFirstOfTheCounversionOfSome/New_Englands_First_Fruits#page/n21/mode/2up ''New England's First Fruits'' (1643)]
}}

{{refn|name=grads|{{cite book
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BDFYAAAAYAAJ&pg=PR5 <!--this issue has a series of articles celebrating JH's 300th birthday --> |title=The Harvard Graduates' Magazine |volume=16 |publisher=Harvard Graduates' Magazine Association |year=1908 |access-date=12 May 2014
}} }}

{{refn|name=greene|
Excerpted from {{cite news|first=Jerome Davis |last=Greene |author-link=Jerome Davis Greene |url=https://www.thecrimson.com/article/1934/12/11/dont-quibble-sybll-ped-note-the-crimson/ |title=Don't Quibble Sybil {{mdash}} The Mail" (Letter to the editor) |work=Harvard Crimson |date=11 December 1934}} ("Don't quibble, Sybil" is a line from Noël Coward's 1930 ''[[Private Lives]]''.)
}}

{{refn|name=HMagJanFeb2000
|Conrad Edick Wright, [http://harvardmagazine.com/2000/01/john-harvard.html John Harvard: Brief life of a Puritan philanthropist] ''Harvard Magazine''. January–February 2000.
"By the time the Harvards settled in Charlestown John must already have been in failing health{{nbsp}}... Consumption kills slowly. By the time Harvard died, he knew what he wanted to do with his estate."
}}

{{refn|name=charter
|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20130317205458/http://hlcra.harvard.edu/files/harvardcharter.pdf Charter of the President and Fellows of Harvard College]
}}

{{refn|name=crime1934|{{cite news
|url=http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1934/11/26/memorial-society-honors-founder-of-college|work=Harvard Crimson|date=26 November 1934
|title=Memorial Society Honors Founder of College In the Name and Image of Two Other Men – College Founded By Grant of the Massachu{{shy}}setts General Court in the Year 1636
|quote=When the members of the Memorial Society place a wreath on the statue of John Harvard today, expecting to honor the memory and the image of the founder of Harvard College, they will be honoring the likeness of another man and the name of a man who was not the legal founder of the college.
}} {{open access}} }}

{{refn|name=Crimson1984
|1=Callan, Richard L. [http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1984/4/28/100-dears-of-solitude-pthe-john/ 100 Years of Solitude: John Harvard Finishes His First Century]. ''The Harvard Crimson''. 28 April 1984. Retrieved 13 October 2012
}}

{{refn|name=guide|{{cite book
|title=Southwark Cathedral – The authorised Guide |first=Guy |last=Rowston |year=2006
}} }}

{{refn|name=morison1|{{cite book
|title=The Founding of Harvard College|url=https://archive.org/details/foundingofharvar0000mori|url-access=registration|last=Morison|first=Samuel Eliot|year=1935|page=[https://archive.org/details/foundingofharvar0000mori/page/210 210]
|quote=John Harvard cannot rightly be called ''the'' founder of Harvard College...
}} }}


{{refn|name=mather|{{cite book
|last=Mather|first=Cotton|location=Hartford|page=10|editor-last=Robbins|editor-first=Thomas
|title=Magnalia Christi Americana: Or, The Ecclesiastical History of New-England, from Its First Planting, in the Year 1620, Unto the Year of Our Lord 1698{{nbsp}}...
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=f0Y5s7bsqDQC&pg=PA10|volume=2|year=1853|publisher=S. Andrus & Son
|quote=But that which laid the most significant ''stone'' in the foundation, was the last will of Mr. John Harvard{{nbsp}}...
}} }}

{{refn|name=melnick|{{cite web
|last=Melnick|first=Arseny James|title=Celebrating the Life and Times of JOHN HARVARD|url=http://www.johnharvard.us/|access-date=20 September 2011
}} }}

{{refn|name=potter1
|1=Alfred C. Potter, [https://books.google.com/books?id=yRsUAAAAIAAJ "The College Library."] ''Harvard Illustrated Magazine,'' vol. IV no. 6, March 1903, pp. 105–112.<!-- see also article at p.133ff -->
}}

{{refn|name=potter2|{{cite book|url=http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/dl/reading/001940602|title=Catalogue of John Harvard's library|first=Alfred Claghorn|last=Potter|location=Cambridge|publisher=J. Wilson|year=1913|access-date=19 April 2016|archive-date=6 May 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160506035219/http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/dl/reading/001940602|url-status=dead}} }}

{{refn|name=stamp
|1=[http://usstampgallery.com/view.php?id=7e107de3fa1437e84bc766bf7c84641bcd258a7c usstampgallery.com: John Harvard]
}}

}}


== Further reading ==
== Further reading ==
*{{cite book|last=Shelley|first=Henry C.|title=John Harvard and His Times|year=1907|publisher=Little, Brown, and Co.|location=Boston, Mass.}}
*{{cite book |last=Rendle |first=William |title=John Harvard, St. Saviour's, Southwark, and Harvard University, U.S.A |year=1885 |publisher=J.C. Francis |location=London}}
*{{cite book|last=Rendle|first=William|title=John Harvard, St. Saviour's, Southwark, and Harvard University, U.S.A|year=1885|publisher=J.C. Francis|location=London}}
*{{cite book|last=Shelley|first=Henry C.|title=John Harvard and His Times|url=https://archive.org/details/johnharvardandh06shelgoog|year=1907|publisher=Little, Brown, and Co.|location=Boston, MA}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{AmCyc Poster|Harvard, John|John Harvard}}
{{AmCyc Poster|Harvard, John|John Harvard}}
{{NIE poster|Harvard, John|John Harvard}}
{{NIE poster|Harvard, John|John Harvard}}
* {{cite book|url=http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/dl/reading/001940602|title=Catalogue of John Harvard's library|first=Alfred Claghorn|last=Potter|location=Cambridge|publisher=J. Wilson|year=1913|access-date=19 April 2016|archive-date=6 May 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160506035219/http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/dl/reading/001940602|url-status=dead}}
* [http://www.stratford-upon-avon.co.uk/images/harvard_house_400_1136.jpg Harvard House] The home of Katherine Rogers in Stratford-Upon-Avon


{{Harvard|state=collapsed}}
{{Authority control|VIAF=38555891}}

{{Authority control}}


{{Persondata
| NAME = Harvard, John
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = English-American clergyman and philanthropist
| DATE OF BIRTH = 26 November 1607
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[Southwark]], England
| DATE OF DEATH = 14 September 1638
| PLACE OF DEATH = [[Charlestown, Boston|Charlestown]], [[Massachusetts]]
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Harvard, John}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Harvard, John}}
[[Category:1607 births]]
[[Category:1607 births]]
[[Category:1638 deaths]]
[[Category:1638 deaths]]
[[Category:17th-century Calvinist and Reformed Christians]]
[[Category:17th-century English clergy]]
[[Category:17th-century English clergy]]
[[Category:17th-century American clergy]]
[[Category:17th-century deaths from tuberculosis]]
[[Category:Alumni of Emmanuel College, Cambridge]]
[[Category:Alumni of Emmanuel College, Cambridge]]
[[Category:English Dissenters]]
[[Category:English Dissenters]]
[[Category:English philanthropists]]
[[Category:English philanthropists]]
[[Category:Harvard University]]
[[Category:Harvard University people]]
[[Category:People educated at St Saviour's Grammar School]]
[[Category:People educated at St Saviour's Grammar School]]
[[Category:People from Southwark]]
[[Category:Clergy from Southwark]]
[[Category:Burials in Boston]]
[[Category:University and college founders]]
[[Category:English emigrants to Massachusetts Bay Colony]]
[[Category:17th-century philanthropists]]
[[Category:Tuberculosis deaths in Massachusetts]]

Latest revision as of 16:29, 25 March 2024

John Harvard
Born(1607-11-29)29 November 1607 (baptised)[1]
Southwark, Surrey, England
Died(1638-09-14)14 September 1638 (aged 30)
Cause of deathTuberculosis
Alma materEmmanuel College, Cambridge (BA, MA)
OccupationPastor
Known forA founder of Harvard College
SpouseAnn Sadler
ChildrenNone
Signature

John Harvard (1607–1638) was an English dissenting minister in colonial New England whose deathbed[2] bequest to the "schoale or colledge" founded two years earlier by the Massachusetts Bay Colony was so gratefully received that it was consequently ordered "that the Colledge agreed upon formerly to be built at Cambridge shalbee called Harvard Colledge."[3] John Harvard was born in Southwark, England. A graduate of Emmanuel College of the University of Cambridge, he emigrated to New England in 1637. Harvard University considers him the most honored of its founders—those whose efforts and contributions in its early days "ensure[d] its permanence"—and a statue in his honor is a prominent feature of Harvard Yard.

Life[edit]

Early life[edit]

Harvard House in Stratford-upon-Avon; the childhood home of John Harvard's mother Katherine Rogers

Harvard was born and raised in Southwark, Surrey, England, (now part of London), the fourth of nine children of Robert Harvard (1562–1625), a butcher and tavern owner, and his wife Katherine Rogers (1584–1635), a native of Stratford-upon-Avon. Her father, Thomas Rogers (1540–1611), served on the borough corporation's council with John Shakespeare.[citation needed] Harvard was baptised in St Saviour's Church (now Southwark Cathedral)[4] and attended St Saviour's Grammar School, where his father was a member of the governing body and a warden of the parish church. His grandparents' house in Stratford-upon-Avon, largely rebuilt after a fire of 1595, survives as 'Harvard House'.[5]

In 1625, bubonic plague reduced the immediate family to only John, his brother Thomas, and Katherine. Katherine was soon remarried‍—‌firstly in 1626 to John Elletson (1580–1626), who died within a few months, then (1627) to Richard Yearwood (1580–1632). She died in 1635, Thomas in 1637.

Left with some property, Harvard's mother was able to send him to the University of Cambridge,[6] He was admitted as a pensioner to Emmanuel College, Cambridge, on 19 December 1627; he was awarded his B.A. in 1632 and M.A. in 1635.[7] He subsequently ministered in the church at Charlestown, Massachusetts, though it is not known whether he was ever episcopally ordained.[8]

Marriage and career[edit]

On 19 April of either 1636 or 1637, Harvard married Ann Sadler (1614–55) of Patcham in East Sussex, sister of his college contemporary John Sadler, at St Michael the Archangel Church, in the parish of South Malling, Lewes.[9][10]

In the spring or summer of 1637, the couple emigrated to the New England Colonies, where Harvard became a freeman of Massachusetts[6] and, settling in Charlestown, a teaching elder of the First Church there[11] and an assistant preacher.[8] In 1638, a tract of land was deeded[clarification needed] to him there, and he was appointed that same year to a committee "to consider of some things tending toward a body of laws."[6][clarification needed]

He built his house on Country Road (later Market Street and now Main Street), next to Gravel Lane, a site that is now John Harvard Mall. His orchard extended up the hill behind his house.[12]

Founding of Harvard College[edit]

Tablets outside Harvard Yard's Johnston Gate. The tablet on the left (above) quotes from a longer history which continues, "And as we were thinking and consulting how to effect this great work, it pleased God to stir up the heart of one Mr. Harvard (a godly gentleman and a lover of learning, there living among us) to give the one-half of his estate (it being in all about 1700 £) toward the erecting of a college, and all his library. After him, another gave 300 £; others after them cast in more; and the public hand of the state added the rest." [13]
Emmanuel College window (1884) depicting John Harvard on left
Tablets, Emmanuel College chapel

Two years before Harvard's death the Great and General Court of the Massachu­setts Bay Colony‍—‌desiring to "advance learning and perpetuate it to posterity: dreading to leave an illiterate ministry to the churches, when our present ministers shall lie in the dust"‍—‌appropriated £400 toward a "schoale or colledge"[3] at what was then called Newtowne.[13] In an oral will spoken to his wife[14] the childless Harvard, who had inherited considerable sums from his father, mother, and brother,[15] bequeathed to the school £780‍—‌half of his monetary estate (equivalent to £152,930.99 today) ‍—‌with the remainder to his wife.[4] This bequest was roughly equal to the Massachusetts Bay Colony's annual tax receipts.[16]

Perhaps more importantly[17] he also gave his scholar's library comprising some 329 titles (totaling 400 volumes, some titles being multivolume works).[18]: 192  In gratitude, it was subsequently ordered "that the Colledge agreed upon formerly to bee built at Cambridg shalbee called Harvard Colledge." [3] (Even before Harvard's death, Newtowne had been renamed[3] Cambridge, after the English university attended by many early colonists, including Harvard himself.)[19]

Death[edit]

On 14 September 1638, Harvard died of tuberculosis and was buried at Charlestown's Phipps Street Burying Ground. In 1828, Harvard University alumni erected a granite monument to his memory there,[6][20] his original stone having disappeared during the American Revolution.[11]

Harvard's widow, Ann, is thought to have married Thomas Allen, his successor as the teacher of the Charlestown church. Allen acted as administrator in the execution of Harvard's estate and paid his bequests.[21]

Legacy[edit]

Founding "myth"[edit]

The Harvard College undergraduate newspaper, The Harvard Crimson,[22] as well as what Harvard Magazine calls "smartass" tour guides,[23][24] commonly assert that John Harvard does not merit the honorific founder, because the Colony's vote creating the institution occurred two years prior to Harvard's bequest. But as detailed in a 1934 letter by Jerome Davis Greene, Secretary of the Harvard Corporation, the founding of Harvard College was not the act of one but the work of many; John Harvard is therefore consid­ered not the founder, but rather a founder,[25][26] of the school‍—‌though the timeliness and generosity of his contribu­tion have made him the most honored of these:

The quibble over the question whether John Harvard was entitled to be called the Founder of Harvard College seems to me one of the least profitable. The destruc­tion of myths is a legiti­mate sport, but its only justifica­tion is the establish­ment of truth in place of error.

If the founding of a universi­ty must be dated to a split second of time, then the founding of Harvard should perhaps be fixed by the fall of the presi­dent's gavel in announc­ing the passage of the vote of 28 October, 1636. But if the founding is to be regarded as a process rather than as a single event [then John Harvard, by virtue of his bequest "at the very threshold of the College's existence and going further than any other contribu­tion made up to that time to ensure its permanence"] is clearly entitled to be consid­ered a founder. The General Court ... acknowl­edged the fact by bestowing his name on the College. This was almost two years before the first President took office and four years before the first students were graduated.

These are all familiar facts and it is well that they should be understood by the sons of Harvard. There is no myth to be destroyed.[27]

Memorials and tributes[edit]

The Harvard Chapel in Southwark Cathedral

A statue in Harvard's honor—not, however, a 'likeness' of him, there being nothing to indicate what he had looked like[8]—is a prominent feature of Harvard Yard (see John Harvard statue) and was featured on a 1986 stamp, part of the United States Postal Service's Great Americans series.[28] A figure representing him also appears in a stained-glass window in the chapel of Emmanuel College, Cambridge.[8][6]

The John Harvard Library in Southwark, London, is named in Harvard's honor, as is the Harvard Bridge that connects Boston to Cambridge.[29]

In Southwark Cathedral, the Harvard Chapel in the north transept was rebuilt with donations from Harvard graduates and dedicated in 1907. The stained-glass window was designed by the American artist, John La Farge and given by the US Ambassador, Joseph Choate.[30]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Tedder, Henry Richard (1891). "Harvard, John" . In Stephen, Leslie; Lee, Sidney (eds.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 25. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 77–78.
  2. ^ Conrad Edick Wright, John Harvard: Brief life of a Puritan philanthropist Harvard Magazine. January–February 2000. "By the time the Harvards settled in Charlestown John must already have been in failing health ... Consumption kills slowly. By the time Harvard died, he knew what he wanted to do with his estate."
  3. ^ a b c d Charter of the President and Fellows of Harvard College
  4. ^ a b Rowston, Guy (2006). Southwark Cathedral – The authorised Guide.
  5. ^ Historic England. "Harvard House (Grade I) (1298524)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d e Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1892). "Harvard, John" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  7. ^ "Harvard, John (HRVT627J)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  8. ^ a b c d Emmanuel College: John Harvard Retrieved 2012-05-01
  9. ^ Morison, Samuel Eliot (1995). The Founding of Harvard College. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674314511. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
  10. ^ Dean, John Ward (July 1996). The New England Historical and Genealogical Register,: Volume 39 1885. Heritage Books. ISBN 9780788404986. Retrieved 4 April 2020.
  11. ^ a b Melnick, Arseny James. "Celebrating the Life and Times of JOHN HARVARD". Retrieved 20 September 2011.
  12. ^ Charlestown Historical Society: Full Historic Timeline
  13. ^ a b New England's First Fruits (1643)
  14. ^ Callan, Richard L. 100 Years of Solitude: John Harvard Finishes His First Century. The Harvard Crimson. 28 April 1984. Retrieved 13 October 2012
  15. ^ The Harvard Graduates' Magazine. Vol. 16. Harvard Graduates' Magazine Association. 1908. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  16. ^ Foster, Margery Somers (1962). "Out of smalle beginings..." : An Economic History of Harvard College in the Puritan Period (1636 to 1712). Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. p. 6.
  17. ^ Alfred C. Potter, "The College Library." Harvard Illustrated Magazine, vol. IV no. 6, March 1903, pp. 105–112.
  18. ^ Potter, Alfred Claghorn (1913). Catalogue of John Harvard's library. Cambridge: J. Wilson. Archived from the original on 6 May 2016. Retrieved 19 April 2016.
  19. ^ Degler, Carl Neumann (1984). Out of Our Pasts: The Forces That Shaped Modern America. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-131985-3. Retrieved 20 September 2011.
  20. ^ Edward Everett (1850). Orations and speeches on various occasions. Vol. I. Boston: Charles C. Little and James Brown. pp. 185–189.
  21. ^ J. Savage, A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, 4 Vols. (Little, Brown & Co., Boston 1860), I, pp. 36–37 (Internet Archive).
  22. ^ "Memorial Society Honors Founder of College In the Name and Image of Two Other Men – College Founded By Grant of the Massachu­setts General Court in the Year 1636". Harvard Crimson. 26 November 1934. When the members of the Memorial Society place a wreath on the statue of John Harvard today, expecting to honor the memory and the image of the founder of Harvard College, they will be honoring the likeness of another man and the name of a man who was not the legal founder of the college. Open access icon
  23. ^ Shand-Tucci, Douglas (2001). The Campus Guide: Harvard Universi­ty. Princeton Architectural Press. pp. 46–51. ISBN 9781568982809.
  24. ^ Primus V (May–June 1999). "The College Pump. Toes Imperiled". Harvard Magazine. Open access icon
  25. ^ Morison, Samuel Eliot (1935). The Founding of Harvard College. p. 210. John Harvard cannot rightly be called the founder of Harvard College...
  26. ^ Mather, Cotton (1853). Robbins, Thomas (ed.). Magnalia Christi Americana: Or, The Ecclesiastical History of New-England, from Its First Planting, in the Year 1620, Unto the Year of Our Lord 1698 ... Vol. 2. Hartford: S. Andrus & Son. p. 10. But that which laid the most significant stone in the foundation, was the last will of Mr. John Harvard ...
  27. ^ Excerpted from Greene, Jerome Davis (11 December 1934). "Don't Quibble Sybil — The Mail" (Letter to the editor)". Harvard Crimson. ("Don't quibble, Sybil" is a line from Noël Coward's 1930 Private Lives.)
  28. ^ usstampgallery.com: John Harvard
  29. ^ Alger, Alpheus B.; Matthews, Nathan Jr. (1892). Harvard Bridge: Boston to Cambridge, March 1892. Boston, Massachusetts: Rockwell and Churchill. p. 14. Retrieved 20 September 2011.
  30. ^ "John La Farge Stained Glass in New England: A Digital Guide". library.bc.edu.

Further reading[edit]

  • Rendle, William (1885). John Harvard, St. Saviour's, Southwark, and Harvard University, U.S.A. London: J.C. Francis.
  • Shelley, Henry C. (1907). John Harvard and His Times. Boston, MA: Little, Brown, and Co.

External links[edit]