Aaron Lucius Chapin
1850-1886
Excerpted from "Seven Presidents of Beloit College" by Dr. Robert Irrmann:
A
Puritan son of New England, a graduate of Yale's distinguished Class of
1837, Aaron Lucius Chapin was a teacher in the New York Institution for
the Deaf and Dumb from 1838 to 1843. In that latter year he committed
himself to service in the West, and came to Milwaukee as Minister to the
Presbyterian Church there. One of the original Trustees of Beloit
College, his colleagues wisely chose him as the first President, a post
he occupied from 1850 to 1886. Mr. Chapin had a vision of collegiate
education on the then frontier, and he led in molding Beloit College to
be a distinguished institution, initially upon the model of Yale
College. For thirty-six years his leadership, and his national
reputation, led the college from infancy to a flourishing manhood.
Chapin was a scholar, endowed with practical wisdom, and his faculty
gratefully followed his lead. At his inaugural he declared that he had
"... nothing here to pledge or to promise but the devotion of an honest
purpose... to give my undivided energies to the building up of this
college...." This he did, and death alone removed him from his service
on the Board of Trustees in 1892. At his Memorial Service, the venerable
William Porter, Chapin's brother-in-law and life-long member of the
faculty, remarked that Chapin's "... work was largely out of sight,
laying foundations for a growth that was yet to come. But so clear was
his vision of the future of the College... that he could do his work
with the most careful fidelity and thoroughness, with an energy that
never rested, and a patience that never grew weary, and then wait for
what he might never live to see."
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