1787-1819 OVERVIEW
Replica of the one-room log cabin, home of the Pittsburgh Academy
Early History: The Pittsburgh Academy
The University has its roots in the Pittsburgh Academy, a preparatory school that was later chartered as the Western University of Pennsylvania before becoming the University of Pittsburgh.
Founder Hugh Henry Brackenridge’s argument on behalf of the Academy was published in the Pittsburgh Gazette on September 2, 1786. Speaking of the Revolutionary War, Brackenridge said,
The door of Janus has been long open, presenting battle axes and all the armory of war. The literary education of our youth has been in the meantime neglected. It becomes us to reinstitute the arts of peace, and keep an equal pace with our sister states. I should rejoice to see Pennsylvania at all times able to produce mathematicians, philosophers, poets, historians, and statesmen, equal to any in the confederacy. With the view to this object it will become her to provide for the cultivation of genius in every part of the government. Who knows what portions of the elementary fire may rest in this country; seminaries of learning will bring forth and kindle it to a blaze.
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania granted a charter to the Pittsburgh Academy on February 28, 1787.
Courses
The first Catalogue of Courses for the Academy stated that under the supervision of the Rev. Mr. Robert Andrews,
The principles of English Grammar and Geography will make a particular part of the academic course, with their application to parsing and explaining the English language, a knowledge of Globes, Maps, &c. The lower classes will be taught Orthography agreeable to standards of the first taste, aided by the Improvement of Sheridan, Walker, and Schott – Reading and a just pronunciation will be a peculiar object of Mr. Andrews’ personal attention – Writing, Mercantile Arithmetic, Navigation, Surveying, and Book-keeping will be taught by the most respectable masters that can be procured; and the usual branches of classical education, with a succinct view of the histories of Ancient Greece and Rome, as detailed by Rollin, Mellot, and Goldsmith, paying particular attention to the Antiquities and Mythology of the same people, as illustrated by Kennet, Potter, &c., together with a stated course of examination on the Belles Lettres, as abridged from Blair’s and Priestley’s Lectures on that subject. A French and Dancing Master will also attend, for those who may wish their children instructed in those graceful parts of a polite education.
Faculty
The Principals of the Pittsburgh Academy, along with the teachers, created courses and organized the curriculum, and so were the first to define English as a school subject in the institution that would become the University of Pittsburgh. The following served as Principals, Masters, or Teachers at the Academy from 1787 to 1816.
Hugh Henry Brackenridge served as the academy’s Principal from 1787 to 1789. He modelled the Pittsburgh Academy on Benjamin Franklin’s Academy of Philadelphia (later the University of Pennsylvania). Brackenridge had a distinguished career as a politician, lawyer and judge. He also had a distinguished literary career. He was the first (or one of the first) published writers on the Pennsylvania frontier, and there are reasons to list him with the major figures of early American literature.
In 1768, Brackenridge enrolled at the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University), where he was friends with James Madison and Philip Freneau. With Freneau he published A Poem, on the Rising Glory of America; Being an Exercise Delivered at the Public Commencement at Nassau-Hall, September 25, 1771. On his own, Brackenridge published poems and plays and several works of nonfiction, including Six Political Discourses Founded on the Scripture (1778) and Narratives of a Late Expedition against the Indians; With an Account of the Barbarous Execution of Col. Crawford; and the Wonderful Escape of Dr. Knight and John Slover from Captivity, in 1782 (1783). In 1778, in Philadelphia, he founded the United States Magazine, which soon failed. In 1786, he was one of the founders of the Pittsburgh Gazette. Between 1792 and 1797, Brackenridge published 4 volumes of his political satire, Modern Chivalry. The third volume is said to be the first work of American literature written and published on the frontier. Modern Chivalry was widely read and admired and established Brackenridge’s legacy as an author. In 1970, Daniel Marder (a University of Pittsburgh Ph.D. and a member of our faculty) published A Hugh Henry Brackenridge Reader: 1770-1815 (University of Pittsburgh Press).
George Welch was elected Principal in 1789, when the Academy was finally prepared to open its doors to students. He served until 1796. He ensured that the curriculum would include “the Learned Languages, English and the Mathematicks.”
In 1795, the Rev. Mr. Arthur (first name unknown) came as one of the 12 “masters” in the Academy. His specialty was rhetoric and belles-lettres. His pupils were taught “the reading of English according to the most approved method.”
Robert Andrews became Principal of the Academy in 1796. He had formerly taught at the Royal Military and Marine Academy of Dublin and, according to the Catalog, he also spent “three years in the same habit in America in two respectable places of literature, with general approbation.”
Robert Steele became Principal of the Academy in 1800. He was the pastor of the First Presbyterian Church. According to Agnes Starrett’s history, Through One Hundred and Fifty Years, he gave frequent public examinations, “considering examinations to bring into operation two powerful incentives to application: the love of praise and the dread of disgrace.”
John Taylor taught at the Academy from 1801 to 1807. He was much loved by his students and taught them to perform astronomical calculations and to make almanacks.
Benjamin B. Hopkins joined the faculty in 1803, arriving from Princeton. He was “was especially popular with his young lady students whom he instructed daily from twelve to one-thirty in geography, grammar, arithmetic, reading, and writing.” The Starrett history of the university includes an April 1804 newspaper account of a performance by his students:
James Mountain
Last week the Students of the Pittsburgh Academy underwent an examination in the presence of the Trustees: and, on Friday evening at the Court-House, they delivered oration; exhibited a dramatic performance embracing a great variety of characters; and spoke several dialogues on different subjects....
The exhibition far exceeded expectation. Many of the boys were not more than twelve years of age, some under ten: all, however, appeared to possess a correct idea of the parts assigned to them; their gestures gave appropriate effect to the sense; their pronunciation, manners and deportment were highly commendable....
The whole scene afforded a most pleasing proof of the value of Mr. Hopkins in this institution. His instructions extend not only to the useful, but to the ornamental articles of education....
James Mountain was educated at Princeton. He came to the Pittsburgh Academy in 1803. According to Starrett, “Previously he had been a student at Dublin University, where his concern over a political affair forced him to flee to America.” He died young and left behind a large library.
Robert Patterson
Robert Patterson was educated at the University of Pennsylvania. He was appointed Principal of the Academy in 1807. Patterson ran a bookstore with John Hopkins at Wood and Fourth Streets. Under a pen name, “The Recluse,” Patterson published poems in newspapers and magazines and, in 1817, a book, The Art of Domestic Happiness and Other Poems. The title poem opens with these lines:
When Youth and Beauty, Health, and Virtue blend
Into one mass, to serve one common end,
And their united energies employ
To build the temple of Domestick Joy,
Say, shall the muse’s lyre remain unstrung,
And leave the Art of Happiness unsung.
Joseph Stockton
Joseph Stockton joined the Academy in 1809 and served as its last Principal. Stockton had founded the Meadville academy, later Allegheny College. He also taught at and served as a founding member of the Western Theological Seminary. He was known as an outstanding teacher and for his use of aphorisms: “As much as possible, do everything yourself: one thing found out by yourself, will be of more real use than twenty told you by your teacher.” He was the author of the Western Speller and the Western Calculator.
Students
Included among the successful students of the Academy, as recalled by Brackenridge’s son, Henry Marie Brackenridge, was Morgan Neville, an editor of the Pittsburgh Gazette and a fiction writer whose stories included “Chevalier Dubac” and “Last of the Boatmen,” the latter a story about rivermen that led John T. Flanagan to label Neville the “Boswell of Mike Fink.” Neville became a member of the bar and sheriff of Allegheny County. He was among the 26 petitioners supporting the new charter for the Western University of Pennsylvania, the first University of Pittsburgh. According Flanagan, “Morgan Neville was the first notable writer of fiction to be born west of the Alleghenies.”
Footnotes
The History of English at the University of Pittsburgh, Highlights
Defining Moments
1787 – Founding of the Pittsburgh Academy
1810 – Founding of the student literary society, the Thespians, to be followed by the Philomathean Literary Society, the Irving Society, and the Franklin Society.
1819 – Founding of the Western University of Pennsylvania
1822 – Rev. Joseph M’Elroy is appointed the first Professor of Rhetoric and Belles Lettres at the Western University. He lasts one year. John Henry Hopkins is hired to replace him.
1881 – P.V. Veeder becomes the first Professor of English. His title is “Professor of Logic, Rhetoric, English Literature and History.”
1882 – American literature is brought into the curriculum.
1882 – First designation of a Department of Rhetoric and English Literature.
1895 – Women are admitted to the Western University. One of them, Margaret Stein, wins the Chancellor’s Literature Prize in 1896.
1904 – The university awards its first PhD degrees in English to Thomas Charles Blaisdell (“Composition Rhetoric”) and George William Gerwig (dissertation topic unknown).
1907 – English is defined as a major area of study in the undergraduate curriculum of the College.
1908 – The Western University of Pennsylvania becomes the University of Pittsburgh.
1910 – George William Gerwig teaches the “Art of the Short Story,” the first fiction writing class to be taught at the university. This course is picked up and taught by the next two department chairs, Lincoln Robinson Gibbs and Percival Hunt.
1918 – Sarah Agnes Scutter Neld, Instructor, first woman to join the faculty in English.
1922 – John Bowman, Chancellor, and Percival Hunt, Professor of English, begin to build a large and comprehensive department of English (Composition, Literature, Writing, Speech and Media).
1924 – Ellen Mary Geyer, first woman to join the tenure track faculty in English; Geyer retires in 1949 as a Full Professor.
1933 – Emily Irving teaches the first course in Children’s Literature.
1935 – Journalism becomes a “division” of the English department.
1946 – The English department created an undergraduate Writing Major, perhaps the first in the county, and sponsored its first annual Conference for Writers. The curriculum includes a course in “Verse Writing,” the first course in poetry writing.
1948 – Buell Whitehill teaches the first course in Film Studies, “The Motion Picture.”
1948 – First African American PhDs (?), Lewis Henry Fenderson and James Oliver Hopson
1949 – The “Speech Division” of the English department breaks off to become an independent department of Speech.
1959 – The A.W. Mellon Educational and Charitable Trust gave $12 million to the University to establish ten distinguished professorships and 50 pre-doctoral fellowships. The English department was named as a recipient. The graduate program in English triples in size in the 1960s.
1964 – Linguistics becomes an independent department.
Some Key Figures in English, 1787-1970
1787-1789 – Hugh Henry Brackenridge, judge, author, Principal of the Academy
1823-1831 – John Henry Hopkins, Professor of Belles Lettres
1862-1865 – Samuel Findley, First Professor Rhetoric, Western University of Pennsylvania
1866-1882 – Edward Payson Crane, Professor of Rhetoric and Logic
1881-1883 – P.V. Veeder, first Professor of English Literature
1870-1889 – Theodore Moses Barber, Professor of Latin and English Literature
1896-1918 – Alexander Stewart Hunter, Professor of English Literature and Ethics
1910-1922 – Lincoln Robinson Gibbs, becomes Professor of English, Department Head
1922-1948 – Percival Hunt, Professor and Department Head
1923-1936 – Wayland Maxfield Parrish, Professor of Public Speaking, later at the U of Illinois
1929-1968 – Frederick Philip Mayer, English department chair (1941-1948)
1930-19?? – Putnam Fennell Jones, Department chair (1948-1954); Dean, Graduate School.
1935-1964 – Agnes Lynch Starrett, Professor of English, Director of the University Press, author of Through 150 Years: The History of the University of Pittsburgh (1937).
1935-1968 – Edwin “Pete” Peterson, central figure in composition and writing, brought considerable national attention to the department and its students.
1937-1968 – W. George Crouch, department chair (1955-1966).
1939-1949 – Buell Whitehill, created significant programs of study in theater, radio, and film; became the first chair of the newly formed Speech dept.
1947-1973 – Charles Crow, important to the development of graduate studies in the 1960s; one of the last to teach literature, composition, and writing.
1949-1973 – Laurence Lee, poet and essayist, was one of the first to be hired to the tenure track for his record as a published writer.
1953-1991 – Montgomery Culver, lead figure in Writing Program after Peterson retires.
1957-2006 – Richard Tobias, Victorianist, President of the University Senate.
1958-1987 – Robert L. Gale, Director of Graduate Studies, directed many dissertations in 60s.
1960-1988 – Robert F. Whitman, Department Chair (1967-1973).
1962-1984 – Thomas Philbrick, Americanist, important figure in graduate program in 60s.
1964-1999 – Robert D. Marshall, departmental Coordinator of Innovation, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.
1966-present – James F. Knapp, Senior Associate Dean, Deitrich School of Arts and Sciences.
1967-present – Marcia Landy, Distinguished Professor of English/Film Studies with a secondary appointment in French and Italian, winner Chancellor’s Distinguished Research Award, key figure in the development of Women’s Studies and Film Studies in our department.
Selected from a long list of notable students
1787
Morgan Neville, author of “The Last of the Boatmen”
1819
Wilkins Tannehill, author of Sketches of the History of Literature from the Earliest Period to the Revival of Letters in the Fifteenth Century
1860s
William D. Brickell, journalist
Charles Romyn Dake, author of A Strange Discovery
1870s
John Milton Duff, president of the Irving society, Professor of medicine
C.V. Thompson, journalist
1880s
Edward E. Eggers, librarian
1890s
William A. Johnston, novelist
1900s
Robert L. Vann, editor of the Pittsburgh Courier
Robinson Jeffers, poet
Thomas Charles Blaisdell (PhD 1904) one of first two Pitt PhDs in English, President of Alma College, Dean of School of Liberal Arts, Penn State
1910s
William Hervey Allen, author of Anthony Adverse
Marie McSwigan, journalist, author of books for children
Elizabeth Levin Stern, author of My Mother and I, a novel of the immigrant experience.
1920s
Bertram L. Woodruff (BA 1929; MA 1930) taught at Johnson C. Smith University.
Mary Martha Purdy (BA 1915, MA 1921), Prof. and department chair, Westminster College.
Stanley Burnshaw (BA 1925), poet and critic.
Frank D. Curtin (BA 1927, MA??), English department chair at St. Lawrence Univ.
Frederick Enos Woltman (BA 1927), Pulitzer Prize winning journalist.
1930s
Gladys Schmitt (BA 1932), novelist, Co-Director CMU Writing Program
Marie Hochmuth Nichols (BA 1931, MA 1936), Professor of Speech and Rhetoric, U of Illinois
John Gerber (BA 1929, MA 1932) Professor and Dept Chair, U of Iowa, head of Project English, Chair of CCCC, Executive Council MLA, Francis Andrew March award (ADE).
Richard Murphy (PhD 1939), Professor of Speech and Rhetoric, U of Illinois
Thomas Matthews Pearce, Jr. (MA 1925, PhD 1930) Professor and Department Chair, University of New Mexico
Clarke Olney (PhD 1933), Professor, University of Miami.
Katherine Gillette Blyley (PhD 1937). Professor and English department chair, Dean, and first woman President (1947-1958) at Keuka College, Canandaigua, NY.
1940s
Gerald Stern (BA 1947), poet, was not an English major—he majored in Political Science with the thought of becoming a lawyer—but we claim him anyway.
Richard Earl Amacher (PhD 1947) Hargis Professor of American literature, Auburn Univ.
Thomas Elliott Berry (PhD 1949) director of graduate studies, West Chester Univ.
Lewis Henry Fenderson (PhD 1948) journalism faculty, Howard University.
Charles Doren Tharp (PhD 1940). Dean of Liberal Arts, Dean of Administration, and Vice President for Academic Affairs, the University of Miami.
John Negley Yarnall (PhD 1941) English department chair, Wilson College, Chambersburg, PA.
Robert Lewis Zetler (PhD 1944) Director, Division of Language and Literature, U of South Florida.
1950s
Myron Cope (BA 1951) sports writer, author, voice of the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Thaddeus Mosley (BA 1950), sculptor
Sylvester (Lester) Goran (BA 1951, MA 1961), novelist
Jack Gilbert (BA 1954), poet
Lloyd Edward Kropp (BA 1957, MA 1962), novelist
Arthur P. Ziegler (BA 1958), Founder, Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation
Peter S. Beagle (BA 1959), novelist
Vera Lillian Mowry (PhD 1950), Professor of Theater History, Hunter College
Sophia Phillips Nelson (PhD 1951), Professor and English department chair, West Virginia State University
George Bleasby (PhD 1952) Professor and English department chair, Westminster College
Helen-Jean Moore (PhD 1952), Director of Libraries, Chair of the Liberal Arts, Point Park College.
Robert Charles Slack (PhD 1953), Head of the Department of Humanities at Carnegie Tech and, later, head of the CMU Curriculum Center.
Donald Eugene Swarts (PhD 1953). Academic Dean, U of Pittsburgh, Johnstown; President, University of Pittsburgh at Bradford, where Swarts Hall bears his name.
Samuel John Hazo (PhD 1957). Poet, Professor and Associate Dean, Duquesne University; first state poet of the Commonwealth of PA.
Lawrence Francis McNamee (PhD 1957), Professor of Literature and Languages at Texas A&M.
1960s
Ralph G. Johnson (PhD 1961), taught at Le Moyne College, Dillard University, Rust College and retired as a Professor of English from the University of Memphis.
Eben Edward Bass (PhD 1962), Chair of the English department at Slippery Rock University, where there is a memorial scholarship in his name.
Ronald Burt Ribman (PhD 1963), dramatist, Guggenheim fellow, Obie award winner, Emmy nominee.
Albert Schmittlein (PhD 1963), department chair, Dean of Arts and Sciences, Slippery Rock U.
Thomas F. Staley (PhD 1963), Professor of English, Director of the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, and the Harry Huntt Ransom Chair in Liberal Arts, U of Texas, Austin.
Bernard Schroder Adams (PhD 1964), ninth President of Ripon College.
John Pierce Watkins (PhD 1964) English department chair, Vice President for Academic Affairs, President of California University of PA. Watkins Hall is named in his honor.
Ralph Armando Ciancio (PhD 1965), Professor and Department Chair, Skidmore College, where there is now a Ciancio Prize for Excellence in Teaching.
Betty Smith Cox (PhD 1965), chair of the Department of English, Gardner-Webb University.
Michael Anthony Murphy (PhD 1965), Professor of English, Brooklyn College.
Peggy A. Knapp (PhD 1966), Professor of English, Carnegie Mellon University.
Eric Van Tine Ottervik (PhD 1967), Vice Provost and Vice President for Planning, Lehigh U.
Irving Nathan Rothman (PhD 1967), Professor of English, U of Houston.
Constance Ayers Denne (PhD 1968), Professor of English at Baruch College, CUNY.
James Gray Watson (PhD 1968), Frances W. O'Hornett Professor of Literature, Univ. of Tulsa.
Paul Zolbrod (PhD 1968), Frederick Seeley Professor of English, Allegheny College. In 1994, Zolbrod retired early to teach at the Crownpoint Campus of the Diné College, N.M.
William Wirt French (PhD 1968) Professor, West Virginia University.
A. Carl Bredahl (PhD 1969), Professor of English, U of Florida.
David Ellsworth Eskey (PhD 1969), Professor and Director of the TESOL program in the Rossier School of Education, University of Southern California
Edward S. Grejda (PhD 1969), Professor and English department chair, Clarion State U.
Granville Hicks Jones (PhD 1969), Professor, Carnegie Mellon University.
Dorothy Kish (PhD 1969), Professor and English department Chair, Point Park College.
Elayne Antler Rapping (PhD 1969), Professor of English and Director of Women’s Studies at Robert Morris University.
Donald Thomas Reilly (PhD 1969), Professor and Chair of the Humanities Division, U of Pittsburgh, Greensburg.
Barbara Hochster Solomon (PhD 1969), Professor of English and Women's Studies and Director of Writing, Iona College.
Andrew Welsh (PhD 1969), Professor of English, Rutgers U, winner of the 1978 MLA James Russell Lowell Prize for Roots of Lyric: Primitive Poetry and Modern Poetics.
Eleanor Buntag Wymard (PhD 1969), Director, Carlow’s MFA in Creative Writing.
Gregory Frank Goekjian (PhD 1970), Professor Emeritus, Portland State University
John H. Miller (PhD 1970), Vice President of Advancement and Fellow of the Kerr Center for Chesapeake Studies, Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum.
Robert Pack (PhD 1970), Vice-Provost, University of Pittsburgh
Silvia Ruffo-Fiore (PhD 1970), Professor of English, University of South Florida
James P. O’Brien (BA 1964) author, sportswriter, journalist.
Don DeCesare (BA 1967), CBS Vice President of Operations.
Lee Gutkind (BA 1968), author, U of Pittsburgh Professor, editor of Creative Nonfiction
Andrew Joseph Solomon (BA 1967, MA 1970, PhD 1974), Professor of English, University of Tampa
Martha Hartle Munsch (BA 1970). Lawyer; trustee, University of Pittsburgh Board of Trustees
...
For this section and the next (1819), we relied heavily on Agnes Lynch Starrett, Through One Hundred and Fifty Years: The University of Pittsburgh (U of Pittsburgh Press, 1937).
For a full account of Morgan Neville’s career, see John T. Flanagan, “Morgan Neville: Early Western Chronicler,” The Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine, Volume 21, Number 4, December 1938, 255-266.