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THE EDUCATIONAL VIEWS AND INFLUENCE OF SAMUEL KNOX PDF

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Copyright by Ashley Foster 1952 Sponsoring Committee t Professor Adolph E. Meyer, Associate Professor D. Campbell W^rekoff and Professor Samuel P. McCutchen THE EDUCATIONAL VIEWS AND INFLUENCE OF SAMUEL KNOX ASHLEY FOSTER Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the School of Education of New York University December 14, 1951 The student hereby guarantees that no part of the disserta­ tion or document which he has submitted for publication has been here­ tofore published or copyrighted in the United States of America, except in the case of passages quoted from other published sources; that he is the sole author and proprietor of said dissertation or document; that the dissertation or document contains no matter which, if published, will be libelous or otherwise injurious, or infringe in any way the copyright of any other party; and that he will defend, indemnify and hold harmless New York University against all suits and proceedings which may be brought and against all claims which may be made against New York University by reason of the publication of said dissertation or document. Ashley Foster 1 A B L E OF C O N T E N I S Introduction page 1 CHAPTER I Colonial America. page 5 CHAPTER II After the War page 24 CHAPTER HI Education for Americana page 4t CHAPTER IV The Essay on Education (1797) naee 66 CHAPTER V Frederick!own 1797 to ISO'-J page 96 CHAPTER VI Baltimore 1803 to 1822 page 128 CHAPTER VH Fredericktown 1822 to 1832 page 149 CHAPTER VTH Objectives of Education and Views an Public Education. page 161 CHAPTER H National Education and the National University page 188 CHAPTER X Summation and Concluding Remarks............. page 201 Chronology page 210 Bibliography page 211 ^ N T R O D U C T I OH This paper is concerned, mainly, with the educational ideas of Samuel Knox, with particular stress on their cultural context. The proper evaluation of any set of ideas, however, necessarily forces one to transcend its chronological and even intellectual limitations. Nature abhors a vacuum; ideas cannot achieve meaning except by relationship. Since ideas do not spring forth fully grown, like Athena from the head of Zeus, this study must concern itself as well with the trends in educational theory and thought of post-Revolutionary America* In the main, the ideas that are discussed are those which date from about 1785 to 1803. The roots of the post-Revolutionary ideas on the nature of soci­ ety — from which Knox derived his views on education — are firmly and deeply imbedded. Here, however, the larger view will be con­ sidered only in the light of whatever influence they exercised upon the ideas of Samuel Knox and his contemporaries. Although Knox propagandized for educational reforms as late as 1826, in his seventieth year, his ideas lose their force and significance when one considers the newer forces affecting American education in the twilight of Knox's career, the second and third decade of the nineteenth century. There are three basic assumptions underlying this paper* Hie first is that the forces struggling for dominance in the post- Revolutionary political scene were those of the business versus Hie agrarian Interests whose philosophical equivalents were, inci­ dentally, an English constitutionalism derived from Locke as op­ posed to a French, humanitarian!sm which stemmed from the romantic -a - views of Rousseau*, The second assumption is that the American Philosophical Society represented' the elite of the post-Revolutionary non-theological intellectuals in America, and that it was- a culturally influential organization* The third assumption is that the members of the American Philosophical Society were acquainted with the educational views of Samuel Knox, The purpose of this thesis is to examine the educational views of Samuel Knox and the Influence they may have had upon those of his contemporaries who were in a social and political position to implement such views with appropriate social and political action* Both the philosophical, social and educational forces that underlay the post-Revolutionary milieu and the forces that helped to mold the post-Revolutionary social and educational thinking are dis­ cussed in Chapters I, II and III* The chief historical authorities cited in the development of the position taken herein were Everts B* Greene, Henry Adams, Arthur M* Sehleslnger, Vernon I* Parrington, Sir Ernest Barker, Curtis P* Nett els, Merle Curti, Claude G* Bowers, Allen 0* Hansen, John A* Krout, Dixon R* Fox and James T* Adams* All the obtainable facts of the life of Samuel Knox are included in this thesis* This biographical information, though scant, is utilized as the matrix for the development of this thesis* Chapters III, V, VI, and VII Include all discoverable facts in the life of Samuel Knox* These excerpts have been arranged chronologically in each chapter* Chapter divisions are based upon the place of residence of Samuel Knox* Thus the end of Chapter ICC includeb all that is known of Samuel Knox until 1797, including his residence at Bladensburg, Mary- -3- land. Chapter V Includes: the biographical data an Samuel Knox from 1797 to 1803, t&en he was living at Frederlcktown, Maryland* Chapter VI, which Includes the time that Knox resided In Baltimore, covers the years from 1803 to about 1822* Chapter VII, which deals with the last yean of Knox's life in Frederlcktown, covers the years from 1822 to 1832* The educational writings of Samuel Knox are discussed according to the time and place they were written* Thus, a work written in 1806 is Included in Chapter VI* In Chapter IV, his Essay on Education* which won an award from the American Philosophical Society, is presented with but limited dis­ cussion* A more elaborate discussion is reserved for the last three chapters* Those historical and philosophical antecedents of the educa­ tional views of Samuel Knox are discussed which relate specifically to his essays. The educational ideas of Samuel Knox are compared to those of his contemporaries in Chapters VUI and EC* Contemporary political figures such as Washington, Adams, Jefferson and Madison are presented in Chapter III in the relation of political events and educational ac­ tivities* These contemporaries include educational theorists, Benjamin Rush, Lafltte du Court ell, Samuel Harrison Smith and Robert Coram among them, as well as other distinguished men such as Joseph Priestley, William Godwin and Richard Price* The educational theories of all these men were expressed between 1785 and 1803* In Chapter VUI, the dis­ cussion centers about the general objectives of education and the various theoretical approaches to public versus private education* In Chapter IX, the discussion is limited to the ideas dealing with a national system of education and a national university for the United States, as advanced by Knox's educational contemporaries* The significance of the educational ideas of Samuel Knox has been related to the time and the place in which his ideas were presented. A general summary of the contribution of Samuel Knox is Included in Chapter X* The primary hypothesis of this thesis is that the educa- tional views of Samuel Knox were fairly representative of the views of most of the politically republican cultural leaders of his time* Other hypotheses of this thesis are that the educational views of Samuel Knox reached a wide audience and were influential in his time* The reader may have to pass judgment on the pertinence of most of the educational ideas expressed ty Samuel Knox to the problems that beset the educator of today* Samuel Knox ( 1756 - 1832 ), pamphleteer, parson and pedagogue, who propagandized for a specific technique and shape of educative process for his own time, only assumes significance when seen as one portion of a larger pattern. Before one can in any way evaluate the contribution of a Samuel Knox, one must first accord him his proper place in the larger scheme of things, not only in matters educational but also in the philosophical, social, economical and political currents which determined and shaped his educational views. Only in this manner can Knox's specific recommendations achieve an historical meaning in a proper frame of reference. In general, it was a quest for liberation from various sorts of tyranny that provided the dominating motive for the colonization of America. The Puritans labelled the land a New Zion and most of the colonists were preoccupied with hopes for the immediate as well as the spiritual future. Colonial America was the terminus for people who were all fundamentally similar. Scattered -6- up and down the Atlantic coastline, the English, the Dutch, the Gemans, the Swedes, the Welsh and the French Huguenots possessed many values and traditions in common and, generally, a similar out­ look upon nature, man and society. Many of their intellectual traits and characteristics had their common origin in the period of the Reformation. The colonists did not exceed the accomplish­ ments of the mother country during their first few generations away from home and, of necessity, the colonist could not evade the cultural heritage of his origin. If America has followed an evolutionary path divergent from that of Europe, it is because she has been faced with dis­ similar problems which required solutions different from those of the Old World. After living in the colonies for some twenty years, the Frenchman, de Crevecoeur, wrote during the Revolutionary War that despite divergent opinions the people possessed certain common characteristics that differentiated them from Europeans — charac­ teristics which might be considered distinctly American. The basis for this underlying unity may be perceived easily if one recalls that political and social leadership was in the hands of a single national group, chiefly English-speaking and English descended. The domina­ ting governmental institutions were patterned on the fundamental English ideas on popular representation, trial by jury and the many O common-law safeguards of liberty and property.* 1. M.Curti* The Growth of American Thought, p. 6. and M.W.Jernigant Factors Influencing the Development of American Education Before the Revolution, p. 7. 2. E.B.Greenei The Revolutionary Generation. 1763 - 1790* p. 180.

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