Ashbel Green | |
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President of Princeton University | |
In office 1812–1822 |
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Preceded by | Samuel Stanhope Smith |
Succeeded by | James Carnahan |
3rd Chaplain of the United States House of Representatives | |
In office November 5, 1792 – November 27, 1800 |
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Preceded by | Samuel Blair |
Succeeded by | Thomas Lyell |
Personal details | |
Born |
Hanover Township, Province of New Jersey |
July 6, 1762
Died | May 19, 1848 | (aged 85)
Ashbel Green, D.D. (July 6, 1762 – May 19, 1848) was an American Presbyterian minister and academic.
Born in Hanover Township, New Jersey, Green served as a sergeant of the New Jersey militia during the American Revolutionary War, and went on to study with Dr. John Witherspoon and graduate as valedictorian from the College of New Jersey, known since 1896 as Princeton University, in 1783. Green later became the third Chaplain of the United States House of Representatives from 1792 to 1800, the eighth (and highly unpopular, due to what many students saw as his heavy-handed leadership style) President of Princeton University, from 1812 to 1822, and the second President of the Bible Society at Philadelphia (now known as the Pennsylvania Bible Society) after having been one its founding members in 1808.
Green was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1814.
He emancipated his family's slave in 1817, taught her and recommended her as a missionary to the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, making her the first single female overseas missionary. He also published a periodical entitled the Christian Advocate.
Green married Elizabeth Stockton on November 3, 1785. They had three children: Robert Stockton Green (1787–1813), Jacob Green (1790–1842), and James Sproat Green (1792–1862), the latter of whom served as U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey and was the father of (1831–1895), Governor of New Jersey. After his first wife died in January 1807, he married Christina Anderson in October 1809. They had one child: Ashbel Green, Jr. (b. 1811).