Andover Theological Seminary
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Andover Theological Seminary, now part of Andover Newton Theological School, is the oldest graduate school of theology in the United States.
History
Andover Theological Seminary was founded in 1807 as a department of Phillips Academy. One of its founders was Timothy Dwight, then president of Yale College.
In 1910, the Seminary and its library merged with Harvard Divinity School. In 1926, the two schools separated, but the books that had been brought to Harvard were allowed to remain at Harvard, in Andover Hall, where they still remain.
In 1965, Andover Theological Seminary merged with Newton Baptist Institute to form the Andover Newton Theological School. Andover's books at Harvard but are the property of the Andover Newton Theological School.
Andover Newton Theological School is a member of Boston Theological Institute, consisting of nine seminaries in the Boston, Massachusetts area.
Notable alumni
Notable alumni of Andover Theological Seminary include the following. (The year following the name is the last year of study at the Seminary.)
- Adoniram Judson 1810?, Baptist missionary to Myanmar, then known as Burma
- Cephas Washburn 1818?, "The Apostle to the Cherokees"
- Author Jacob Abbott 1824
- Joseph Hardy Neesima 1874, founder of Doshisha University in Japan
External links
- Andover Newton Theological School (http://www.ants.edu/)
- Andover-Harvard Library History (http://www.hds.harvard.edu/library/general/library_history.html)