The Role of Libraries and Schools in Puritan America


Puritans established schools and libraries to provide mediated access to select texts in order to "preserve" their culture.

AFTER GOD HAD carried us safe to New England, and we had built our houses, provided necessaries for our livelihood, reared convenient places for God's worship, and led the civil government, one of the next things we longed for and looked after was to advance learning and perpetuate it to posterity; dreading to leave an illiterate ministry to the churches, when our present ministers shall lie in the dust. And as we were thinking and consulting how to effect this great work, it pleased God to stir up the heart of one Mr. Harvard (a godly gentleman and a lover of learning, there living among us) to give the one-half of his estate (it being in all about £700) toward the ing of a college, and all his library. After him, another gave £300; others after them cast in more; and the public hand of the state added the rest. The college was, by common consent, appointed to be at Cambridge (a place very pleasant and accommodate) and is called (according to the name of the first founder) Harvard College. The edifice is very fair and comely within and without, having in it a spacious hall where they daily meet at commons, lectures, and exercises; and a large library with some books to it, the gifts of diverse of our friends, their chambers and studies also fitted for and possessed by the students, and all other rooms of office necessary and convenient with all needful offices thereto belonging.--New England's First Fruits (London, 1643)

 

Indeed Knowledge is the first Thing, that is necessary in order to Salvation; And it is absolutely necessary, Unspeakable Necessary. [Prov. 1] We read Hosea 4:6. of People Destroyed for the lack of Knowledge. Ah! destructive Ignorance, what shall be done to chase thee out of the World! A world which by thee is rendered a dark World, the Kingdom of Darkness!

... And, O thou Saviour, and Shepherd of Thy New-English Israel: Be Entreated Mercifully to look down upon they Flocks in the Wilderness. Oh, give us not up to the Blindness and Madness of neglecting the Lambs in the Flocks. Inspire thy People, and all Orders of men among thy People with a just care for the Education of Posterity. Let Well-Ordered and well-instructed and well-maintained Schools, be the Honour and the Defence of our Land. Let Learning, and all the Helps and Means of it, be precious in our Esteem and by Learning, let the Interests of thy Gospel so prevail, that we may be made wise unto Salvation. Save us, O our Lord JESUS CHRIST. Save us from the Mischiefs and Scandals of an Uncultivated Offspring; Let this be a Land of Light, unto Thou, O Sun of Righteousness, do Thyself arise unto the World with Healing in thy Wings. Amen.--From Cotton Mather's "The Education of Children"

 

III. Instruct your children in the great matters of Salvation; Oh, Parents, do not let them die without instruction.

There is indeed, an Instruction in Civil Matters which we owe unto our Children. It is very pleasing to our Lord Jesus Christ, that our Children be well formed with, and well informed in the rules of Civility, and not be left a Clownish, and Sottish, and Ill Bred sort of Creatures. An Unmannerly Brood is a Dishonour to Religion.

And, there are many points of a Good Education that we should bestow upon our Children; they should Read, and Write, and Cyphar [arithmetic], and be put unto some Agreeable Callings; and not only our Sons, but our Daughters also should be taught such things, as will afterwards make them useful in their places. There is a little Foundation of Religion laid in such an Education. But besides, and beyond all this, there is an Instruction in Divine Matters, which our Children are to be made partakers of.--From Cotton Mather's "The Duties of Parents To Their Children"


Puritans suffered from a print "economy of scarcity" that meant few individuals (other than members of the Mather family) would be able to own a significant collection of books. Many texts were disseminated in manuscript form, with readers transcribing whole or excerpted texts into their own notebooks for safekeeping.


This meant that those who wished to read and "make" books had to know those who already owned their own copies.

In a letter to his son at Yale, James Noyes talks about the difficulties he is experiencing finding a copy of the works of Ramus. As Ramsian played a central role of the curriculum of that day, the younger Noyes would have needed a copy for his college studies:

"I have just sent twice to your brother James for Ramus or Gudlibet's comment on Ramus, but in vaine, and I know not way to doe or you wish doe. If I had beene well I would have tried the young ministers round about us but I am not able at present. January 8, 1706."

(Letter presently in the manuscript holdings of the Peabody-Essex Institute.)


Thus, the specific properties of a manuscript culture ensured that members of the public would receive information through the mediation of ministers and public officials, while ministers and other members of the standing order received their education through the mediation of those who were already members of that class.


Return to "Save Us from Mischiefs and Scandals"

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