'Abraham Bruyn Hasbrouck' (
29 November 1791 –
23 February 1879) was the sixth
President of
Rutgers College (now
Rutgers University) serving from 1840 to 1850.
[ Abraham Bruyn Hasbrouck ]
Biography
He was born in 1791 in
Kingston, New York to Jonathan Hasbrouck (1763-1846) and Catherine Wynkoop (1765-?).
He studied at the Kingston Academy in New York before entering
Yale College where he graduated in 1810. Studying the law under
Tapping Reeve,
Elisha Williams, and
James Gould, he returned to
Kingston, New York in 1814 to practice
law. In 1817 he started a law practice with
Charles H. Ruggles.
He married on
12 September,
1819 to Julia Frances Ludlum (1795-1869), the sister of Judge Gabriel W. Ludlum. Together they had eight children, including a son: Jonathan Howard Bruyn Hasbrouck (1820-1899).
Hasbrouck was elected to the
Nineteenth United States Congress in 1824 serving from 1825 to 1827 as a
Whig.
[1] In 1840, he was appointed by the Trustees of Rutgers College as the sixth president, and the first layman to hold the office. During his tenure as President, he taught
Rhetoric,
Constitutional Law, and
Political Economy. He strove to establish independence from the
Dutch Reformed Church and added modern languages, and expanded scientific instruction to the curriculum. He resigned in 1849, remaining in office until 1850 when
Theodore Frelinghuysen was appointed his successor.
Hasbrouck retired to
Kingston, New York, of
pneumonia on
23 February 1879.
Legacy
A street named after him in Newburgh, New York.
References
1. Abraham Bruyn Hasbrouck, 1791-1879
External links
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Hasbrouck children