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Laurenus Clark Seelye

Laurenus Clark Seelye
Seelye Laurenus.jpg
1st President of Smith College
In office
1875–1910
Preceded by None
Succeeded by Marion LeRoy Burton
Personal details
Born September 30, 1837
United States Bethel, Connecticut
Died October 12, 1924(1924-10-12) (aged 87),
Northampton, Mass
Alma mater Union College

Laurenus Clark Seelye (1837–1924), known as L. Clark Seelye, was the first president of Smith College, serving from 1873-1910. He graduated from Union College (NY) in 1857 with Phi Beta Kappa honors and membership in The Kappa Alpha Society. Seelye later studied at Andover Theological Seminary and the Universities of Berlin and Heidelberg. After serving as a Congregational Minister in Springfield, Massachusetts, he became Williston Professor of Rhetoric, Oratory and English Literature at Amherst College, where his brother Julius was Professor of Mental and Moral Philosophy. Under President Stearns, Amherst College in 1865 had 17 faculty and 203 students. Seelye taught at Amherst from 1865 until his election as President of the newly formed Smith College in nearby Northampton, Massachusetts in 1873.

Seelye was born on September 20, 1837, in Bethel, Connecticut, to Seth and Abigail (Taylor) Seelye. He is the brother of Julius Hawley Seelye, fifth president of Amherst College.

Seelye married Henrietta Chapin, daughter of Lyman and Harriet (Sheldon) Chapin, of Albany, on November 17, 1863. They had seven children: Ralph Holland, Harriet Chapin, Abigail Taylor, Arthur, Walter Clark, Henrietta and Bertram.

On July 10, 1873, L Clark Seelye accepted the office of President of Smith College from the Smith College board of Trustees. The college admitted its first students in 1875, and officially opened on September 9 of that year. There were 14 students (11 of whom graduated) and 4 faculty, including Seelye.

Smith College had been chartered in 1871, with the main endowment coming from the estate of Sophia Smith, a spinster whose will had stipulated that the money be used to found a college for women. It aspired to be the first educational institution which would give young women the same academic and intellectual training that men received at other colleges. The idea of the intellectual and academic equality of women and men was popular in some progressive circles, but was by no means widespread at the time. Thus Seelye, in addition to being President, teacher, fund-raiser, and chief financial officer for the new college, also needed to spend time repeatedly defending the principles upon which the college had been founded. A measure of his success, and of the changing times, may be seen in the fact that, when he retired, the Smith College enrollment had grown from 14 to 1635, and the number of faculty had increased from 4 to 105.


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