Walker, James, 1794-1874

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Walker, James, 1794-1874

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Walker

Forename :

James

Date :

1794-1874

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1794-08-16

1794-08-16

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1874-12-23

1874-12-23

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Biographical History

James Walker (1794-1874) was President of Harvard University from February 10, 1853 to January 26, 1860. Walker was also a Unitarian minister and religious philosopher.

James Walker was born to John Walker and Lucy (Johnson) Walker on August 16, 1794 in what was then Woburn, Massachusetts (later to become a part of Burlington ). Walker attended the Lawrence Academy in Groton, Massachusetts (1807-1810) and graduated from Harvard University in 1814. After graduation, Walker taught for one year at the Phillips Exeter Academy and then returned to Harvard University to study at the Divinity School (A.M. 1817).

Walker spent the next twenty years as a Unitarian minister for the Harvard Church in Charlestown, Massachusetts. A well respected preacher, Walker became a leader in the Unitarian movement. He helped organize the American Unitarian Association (1825), contributed to American Unitarian Tracts, and edited the Unitarian movement's journal, the Christian Examiner, from 1831 to 1839. In his writings, Walker discussed various philosophical questions involving ethical theory, natural religion, and phrenology. His most important work was The Philosophy of Man's Spiritual Nature in Regard to the Foundation of Faith (1834), a combination of several philosophical arguments supporting the existence of God.

Walker married in 1829 to Catherine Bartlett (1798-1868). They had no children.

Walker was a Fellow of Harvard University (1834-1853) and a member of the Board of Overseers (1825-1836, 1864-1874). He was appointed the Alford Professor of Natural Religion, Moral Philosophy, and Civil Polity in 1838, serving until 1853. He also acted as the college preacher, speaking in the college chapel.

In 1853, Walker was elected President of Harvard University. His administration of the school was uneventful and no great reforms were instituted by him. The only new subject added to the course curriculum was music. Evening prayers were discontinued in 1855, the Appleton Chapel was completed in 1858, and Boylston Hall was built in 1857. Suffering from various infirmities, Walker resigned in 1860.

After retiring from Harvard University, Walker spent his time writing, lecturing, and preaching. He devoted his studies to philosophy and literature. When the American Civil War started, Walker gave speeches in support of the Union cause.

Walker died on December 23, 1874. At his death, he left his books and the bulk of his estate, $15,000, to the Harvard College Library and a personal reputation of modesty and good humor.

References: Frothingham, Octavius Brooks. Memoir of Rev. James Walker, D.D., LL.D. Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Second Series, Vol. VI, 1891. Boston: The Society, 1891. 443-468 Morison, S. E. James Walker. In Dictionary of American Biography, Vol. XIX, New York:Charles Scribner's Sons,1933. Morison, Samuel Eliot.Three Centuries of Harvard, 1636-1936.Cambridge, Massachusetts:Harvard University Press,1936. Walker, James.Sermons Preached Chiefly in the College Chapel. Edited by William Orne White. Vol 1., Reason, Faith, and Duty; Vol. 2, Sermons.Boston: American Unitarian Association,1884. From the guide to the Papers of James Walker, 1826-1872., (Harvard University Archives)

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https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q6145003

https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n85352498

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