Английская Википедия:Albert Baldwin Dod

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Шаблон:Infobox person Albert Baldwin Dod (March 24, 1805 – November 20, 1845) was an American Presbyterian theologian and professor of mathematics.

Early life

Dod was born on March 24, 1805, in Mendham, New Jersey. He was the son of Daniel Dod (1778–1823) and Nancy (née Squire) Dod (1780–1851).[1] His mother was the sister of Dr. Ezra Squire, of Caldwell, New Jersey.[1]

Career

After a religious awakening while at college in Princeton, where he graduated with the class of 1822, Dod became affiliated with the influential Princeton Theologians. He published frequently in the group's chief outlet, the Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review, edited by Charles Hodge.[2] Among his publications there, an attack on Transcendentalism (perhaps written with James Waddel Alexander; published in the January 1839 issue) attracted wide notice and was later republished by Andrews Norton.[3]

For much of his life he taught mathematics at the college, and participated in theological discussion and preaching at the Seminary, in Princeton.[4] The Doctorate in Divinity, though, was conferred on him by the University of North Carolina and by New York University.[5]

Personal life

Dod married Caroline Smith Bayard (1807–1891), the daughter of Samuel Bayard (1766-1840) and granddaughter of Continental Congressman John Bubenheim Bayard (1738-1808), all descendants of Peter Stuyvesant.[6] Together, Albert and Caroline had eight children:[7]

The 1840 US census records Dod as owning one female slave aged ten to twenty-four.[14] This is the latest known instance of a Princeton professor owning slaves; Dod was also one of the last slaveholders in the community of Princeton as well as New Jersey overall.[14] The state adopted a system of gradual emancipation in 1804, meaning that the woman in Dod's household was born to an enslaved mother between 1816 and 1830, and that she would be manumitted when she came of age.[14]

Dod died of pleurisy after a brief illness on November 20, 1845.[15]

Legacy

In 1869, his son Samuel Bayard Dod (Princeton Class of 1857) established an Endowed Professorship at Princeton University in mathematics in memory of him.[16] In 1926, his great-grandson, Richard Stockton III, commissioned a bust of Dod which was placed at Dod Hall, the undergraduate dormitory named in his honor.[17]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Authority control