Mann, Horace, 1796-1859
Name Entries
person
Mann, Horace, 1796-1859
Name Components
Name :
Mann, Horace, 1796-1859
Mann, Horace
Name Components
Name :
Mann, Horace
Mann, Horace, 1796-1856.
Name Components
Name :
Mann, Horace, 1796-1856.
マン, ホレース
Name Components
Name :
マン, ホレース
Genders
Exist Dates
Biographical History
Educator and innovator of the public school system in the United States.
American educator and social reformer.
U.S. representative from Massachusetts, reformer, college president, and author.
Educationist, lecturer and politician. First secretary of Massachusetts Board of Education (1837), introduced reform in school systems and established normal schools.
American educator, lawyer, state legislator, U.S. congressman, and college president; resident of Dedham, Boston, and West Newton, Mass., and president of Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio.
American educator.
Horace Mann was an educator and a statesman who greatly advanced the cause of universal, free, non-sectarian public schools. Mann also advocated temperance, abolition, hospitals for the mentally ill, and women's rights.
Secretary of the Mass. Board of Education (1837-1848); representative in Congress.
Graduate of Brown University (class of 1819).
Horace Mann, "Father of our Public Schools," was born in Franklin, Massachusetts on May 4, 1796. His family was poor and his father died when Mann was thirteen. Up to the age of fifteen, he never attended school for more than ten weeks in a year. After attending the village school, he went to Williams Academy in Wrentham, Massachusetts, while he earned money braiding straw for the hat factories of Franklin. Mann entered Brown in 1814 but had to leave shortly thereafter due to illness. He re-enrolled at Brown in 1816 and graduated as valedictorian of his class in 1819. His Commencement address was entitled "The Gradual Advancement of the Human Species in Dignity and Happiness."
In 1821, Mann entered the law school of Judge James Gould of Litchfield, Connecticut. He opened his law practice in Dedham, Massachusetts in 1823. In 1830, Mann married Charlotte Messer, daughter of Brown University President Asa Messer. She died two years later. Following Charlotte's death, Mann moved to Boston to practice law with Edward G. Loring. Having been elected to the Massachusetts Senate in 1827, Mann was involved with the passage of legislation creating the State Board of Education and the first state insane asylum in the United States.
In 1837, he began his ten year position of Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education, during which he promoted common schools and the proper training of teachers. He brought about the establishment of the first state normal school in the United States, which was opened on July 3, 1839 in Lexington, Massachusetts. In 1843, he married Mary T. Peabody, one of "Peabody sisters of Salem." In 1848, he was elected to the House of Representatives to fill the term of John Quincy Adams, who had died in office. Antioch College, a new non-sectarian, coeducational college in Yellow Springs, Ohio appointed Mann president in 1853. He continued as president until 1859, when he delivered his last baccalaureate address, which included the often quoted words, "I beseech you to treasure up in your hearts these my parting words; be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity." He died in Yellow Springs on August 2, 1859. Two years later his body was removed to the Mann lot in the North Burial Ground in Providence, Rhode Island.
(Much of this biography was taken from the Encyclopedia Brunoniana by Martha Mitchell)
eng
Latn
External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/30332900
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n82137191
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n82137191
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q1151173
Other Entity IDs (Same As)
Sources
Loading ...
Resource Relations
Loading ...
Internal CPF Relations
Loading ...
Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
Subjects
Booksellers and bookselling
Abolitionists
Actions and defenses
Education
Education
Antislavery movements
Authors
Women authors
Botany
Child care
Commonplace-books
Courtship
Courts-martial and courts of inquiry
Debtor and creditor
Educational innovations
Educators
Families
Fugitive slave law of 1850
Inventories of decedents' estates
Law schools
Law teachers
Lawyers
Lectures and lecturing
Legislators
Letters
Lieutenant governors
Love-letters
Mann family
Messer family
Practice of law
Preaching
Real property
Religious thought
Sermons
Social life and customs
Teachers institutes
Voyages and travels
Women
Women
Women educators
Women social reformers
Nationalities
Activities
Occupations
Authors
College presidents
Educators
Educators
Judge advocates
Law students
Lawyers
Legislators
Legislators
Reformers
Representatives, U.S. Congress
Legal Statuses
Places
Massachusetts
AssociatedPlace
Massachusetts--Norfolk County
AssociatedPlace
Connecticut
AssociatedPlace
Connecticut--Litchfield
AssociatedPlace
United States
AssociatedPlace
United States
AssociatedPlace
Massachusetts
AssociatedPlace
Massachusetts--Dedham
AssociatedPlace
United States
AssociatedPlace
Massachusetts
AssociatedPlace
Massachusetts
AssociatedPlace
Dedham (Mass.)
AssociatedPlace
United States
AssociatedPlace
Massachusetts--Wrentham
AssociatedPlace
Massachusetts
AssociatedPlace
United States
AssociatedPlace
Massachusetts
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>