Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Rufus Babcock

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Preceded by
  
Jeremiah Chaplin

Died
  
May 4, 1875

Alma mater
  
Brown University

Education
  
Brown University

Religion
  
Baptist

Name
  
Rufus Babcock


Rufus Babcock

Born
  
September 18, 1798 North Colebrook, CT (
1798-09-18
)

Books
  
Forty Years of Pioneer Life Memoir of Rev J M Peck

Succeeded by
  
Robert Everett Pattison

Rev. Rufus T. Babcock (September 18, 1798 – May 4, 1875) was an American clergyman and the second president of Colby College in Waterville, Maine.

Contents

Life

Babcock was born at North Colebrook, Connecticut. He graduated Brown University in 1821, and was a tutor for two years at Columbian College in Washington, D. C. In 1823 he was ordained pastor of the Baptist church at Poughkeepsie, N. Y.; in 1826 he became pastor in Salem, Mass.; and in 1833 he was elected as the second president Waterville College (now Colby College) in Waterville, Maine.

At the time, the college was in debt $18,000 and could not meet more than three-fifths of its current expenses. Champlin Hall was erected in 1836. The value of the College property was $50,000.

He resigned in 1836, and accepted the pastorate of the Spruce street Baptist church in Philadelphia, whence he returned after three years to his first charge at Poughkeepsie. He was subsequently pastor of a church in Paterson, N. J., and has held successively the offices of secretary of the American and foreign Bible society, of the American Sunday school union, and of the Pennsylvania colonization society. He edited for five years the "Baptist Memorial." He received a DD from Bowdoin College in 1834. He was the President of the American Baptist Publication Society for many years. He died in Salem, MA.

Publications

  • "Memoir of Andrew Fuller" (1830)
  • "History of Waterville College" (1836)
  • "Tales of Truth for the Young" (1837)
  • "The Emigrant's Mother" (1859)
  • "Memoirs of John M. Peck" (1862)
  • References

    Rufus Babcock Wikipedia