Harris, Charles Wilson, 1771-1804.

Hide Profile

Charles Wilson Harris (1771-1804), originally from Concord, N.C., was a lawyer and educator of Halifax and Warren counties, N.C., and one of the first professors at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, N.C.

From the description of Charles Wilson Harris papers, 1765-1924. WorldCat record id: 23107630

Charles Wilson Harris (1771-15 or 26 January 1804), educator and lawyer, was born at Mill Grove Plantation, about seven miles west of Concord, N.C. His paternal grandfather, Charles Harris, emigrated with four brothers and a sister from Ayrshire, Scotland, to Pennsylvania about 1725 and thence to the Poplar Tent district of what was then Anson County sometime between 1745 and 1751. His father, Robert Harris, served under General Joseph Graham in the Revolutionary War and lost his right arm in the skirmish at Clapp's Mill, preliminary to the Battle of Guilford Court House. His uncle, Dr. Charles Harris, is credited by Kemp P. Battle with having taught at his home probably the first medical school in the State.

Charles Wilson Harris was the second of three children born to Robert and Mary Wilson Harris. His older sister, Jane Wilson Harris, married Nathaniel Alexander. His younger brother, Robert Wilson Harris, was briefly engaged in commerce at Salisbury and later undertook farming near Sneedsborough in Anson County. His mother died in his youth, and his father married Mary Brevard Davidson, the widow of General William Lee Davidson for whom Davidson College was named. Although no record of Harris's preparatory education survives, it is known that a classical school was conducted in association with the Poplar Tent Church of which his father was for many years the presiding elder. Harris attended the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) and was awarded the Mathematical Oration at his graduation in 1792.

For the next two years, Harris was a teacher in Mecklenburg County, N.C., and later in Prince Edward County, Va. Although impossible to substantiate, this was probably at Hampden-Sydney College. At some point, he attended William and Mary College in Williamsburg to obtain, as he wrote some years later, a smattering of experimental philosophy, a subject that he felt had been shamefully neglected in his studies. On returning to North Carolina, Harris studied medicine for a while with his uncle, Dr. Charles Harris, a well-known physician. During his later tenure at Chapel Hill, there being no physician at the University, he kept a stock of medicines, both for the students and the townspeople, which he sold at cost. In March 1795, he joined the faculty of the University of North Carolina as professor of mathematics. The only other member of the academic staff at this time was the presiding professor, David Ker. In the summer of 1796, Ker resigned under pressure from the trustees, and Harris thereafter acted as presiding professor until the time of his own resignation the following December.

Although his tenure on the faculty was brief, Harris played a seminal role in the early direction of the University. On 3 June 1795, he organized the students to form a debating club, which in succeeding months became the Dialectic and Philanthropic Literary Societies. Organized exercises were conducted by these societies each Friday evening and Saturday morning to provide practice in public speaking, English composition, and debate. The exercises were drawn from modern history and literature, subjects not included in the standard classical curriculum prevailing at colleges of the day. The sessions implemented Harris's belief that true learning consists rather in exercising the reasoning faculties and laying up a store of useful knowledge, than in overloading the memory with words of dead languages, a pedagogical theory he shared with General William R. Davie, the moving spirit among the trustees. His second lasting contribution to the University's early development lay in persuading Joseph Caldwell, a graduate of the class of 1791 at the College of New Jersey, to join the faculty in October 1796. Caldwell succeeded Harris as presiding professor in 1797 and continued to guide the University's growth until his death in 1835.

Harris completed his legal studies in April 1797, reading law under General Davie at Halifax. He was admitted to the bar in that same year and succeeded to Davie's practice when Davie was elected governor. While in Halifax, Harris maintained his interest in the University of North Carolina, which in 1799 granted him the honorary master of arts degree; in 1800, he was elected a trustee. In 1802, he was induced by Davie and others to accept an appointment on the bench. However, a worsening tubercular disease, which had first afflicted him in October 1798, prevented his nomination from being considered. In the spring and summer of 1803, Harris traveled to the Bahamas attempting to recover his health. He arrived in New York in September, and after a brief stay returned to the family home at Mill Grove.

On 14 April 1798, Harris was admitted to the Order of Freemasons at Chapel Hill. Although both his grandfather and father had served as elders of the Poplar Tent Church, Harris himself appears to have held no religious convictions until the period immediately preceding his death. It seems likely that his religious lassitude as well as his membership in the Freemasons were attributable to the influence of his mentor, General Davie. During the weeks before his death, Harris confessed the Christian faith and instructed that no Masonic rites be included in his funeral service. He died at Sneedsborough while visiting his brother Robert and was buried in a private cemetery in Anson County. Although his tombstone records his date of death as 15 January 1804, both the Raleigh Minerva and the Register in their issues of 15 February 1804 report his death as having occurred on 26 January.

From the Documenting the American South website, using information from the Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, William S. Powell, editor (Chapel Hill: UNC Press, 1979-1996).

From the guide to the Charles Wilson Harris Papers, 1765-1924, (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection.)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn University of North Carolina Papers, 1757-1935, (bulk 1789-1930) University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. University Archives and Records Service
creatorOf Charles Wilson Harris Papers, 1765-1924 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection
creatorOf Harris, Charles Wilson, 1771-1804. Charles Wilson Harris papers, 1765-1924. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Harris, Charles. person
associatedWith Harris family. family
associatedWith Harris, Robert. person
associatedWith Poplar Tent Church (Cabarrus County, N.C.) corporateBody
associatedWith University of North Carolina (1793-1962) corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Cabarrus County (N.C.)
North Carolina
United States
Chapel Hill (N.C.)
Concord (N.C.)
Subject
College teachers
Families
Lawyers
Lawyers
Physicians
Physicians
Presbyterians
Occupation
Activity

Person

Birth 1771

Death 1804

Related Descriptions
Information

Permalink: http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w65z05fx

Ark ID: w65z05fx

SNAC ID: 36984373