John Harvard (16071638) was an English Puritan minister in colonial New England whose deathbed bequest to the
founded two years earlier by the Massachusetts Bay Colony was so gratefully received that the colony consequently ordered "that the
agreed upon formerly to
built at
called [[Harvard |Harvard College]]".
Harvard was born in Southwark, England, and earned bachelor's and master's degrees from Emmanuel College, Cambridge. In 1637 he emigrated to the Massachusetts Bay Colonyone of the Thirteen Colonies of British Americawhere he became a teaching elder and assistant preacher of the First Church in Charlestown.
Harvard died of tuberculosis in 1638, leaving a large sum of money and his 400-volume scholar's library to the colony's new school, which the colony then voted to name in his honor. Harvard University considers him the most honored of its founders—those whose efforts and contributions in its early days "ensured its permanence"—and a statue in his honor is a prominent feature of Harvard Yard.
In 1625, bubonic plague reduced the immediate family to only John, his brother Thomas, and Katherine. Katherine was soon remarriedfirstly in 1626 to John Elletson (1580–1626), who died within a few months, then (1627) to Richard Yarward (1580–1632). She died in 1635, Thomas in 1637.
Left with some property, Harvard's mother was able to send him to the University of Cambridge, He was admitted as a pensioner to Emmanuel College, Cambridge, on 19 December 1627; he was awarded his B.A. in 1632 and M.A. in 1635.
In the spring or summer of 1637, the couple emigrated to the New England Colonies, where Harvard became a freeman of Massachusetts and, settling in Charlestown, a teaching elder of the First Church there and an assistant preacher, though it is not known whether he was episcopally ordained. In 1638, a tract of land was deeded to him there, and he was appointed that same year to a committee "to consider of some things tending toward a body of laws."
He built his house on Country Road (later Market Street and then Main Street), next to Gravel Lane, a site that is now the John Harvard Mall. His orchard extended up the hill behind his house.
Harvard's widow, Ann, is believed to have married again, to Thomas Allen, Harvard's successor as teacher of the Charlestown church and administrator of Harvard's estate.J. Savage, A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, 4 Vols. (Little, Brown & Co., Boston 1860), I, pp. 36–37 (Internet Archive).
Perhaps more importantly he also gave his scholar's library comprising some 329 titles (totaling 400 volumes, some titles being multivolume works). In gratitude, it was subsequently ordered "that the
agreed upon formerly to
built at
called [[Harvard |Harvard College]]." (Even before Harvard's death, Newtowne had been renamed Cambridge, after the English university attended by many early colonists, including Harvard himself.)
The John Harvard Library in Southwark, London, is named in Harvard's honor, as is the Harvard Bridge linking Boston and Cambridge, Massachusetts.
In Southwark Cathedral, where Harvard was baptised, the Harvard Chapel in the north transept was rebuilt with donations from Harvard graduates and dedicated in 1907. The stained-glass window was designed by the American artist John La Farge, and given by the American ambassador to the United Kingdom, Joseph Choate.
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