'Francis Andrew March' (
October 25,
1825 in
Millbury, Massachusetts –
September 9,
1911 in
Easton, Pennsylvania) was an
American polymath, academic,
philologist, and
lexicographer. He is considered the principal founder of modern
comparative linguistics in
Anglo-Saxon. March applied the methods of studying the
Latin and
Greek classics towards the study of
English literature, and led the way for the first scientific study of the
English language.
Born in
Millbury, Massachusetts, March occupied the chair of
English language and
comparative philology at
Lafayette College (located in
Easton, Pennsylvania) from
1857 to
1907. It was the first post of its kind. March was one of the first professors to advocate and teach
English in colleges and universities.
Amongst other subjects taught
botany,
French,
German,
Greek,
Latin, "
mental philosophy",
political economy, the
Constitution, and
law.
He also served as president of the
American Philological Association (1873-1874; 1895-1896); the Spelling Reform Association (after 1876); and of the
Modern Language Association (1891-1893).
Works
★ In
1870, March published ''A Comparative Grammar of the Anglo-Saxon Language'' (reprinted,
1977). Based on ten years of intensive research, the work examines the relationship of Anglo-Saxon to
Sanskrit,
Greek,
Latin, and five Germanic languages.
★ March served as editor of the ''Douglass Series of Christian Greek and Latin Writers'', to which he contributed
Latin Hymns.
★ In
1881, he wrote ''The Spelling Reform'', a contribution to the reform of English
orthography.
★ With his son Francis Andrew March (1863–1928), he edited ''A Thesaurus Dictionary of the English Language'' (
1903; 2nd ed.,
1980).
★ He was the first American superintendent over the volunteer reading programme of the ''
Oxford English Dictionary'', thus providing valuable support to
James Murray in the compilation of this monumental work.
Death and Legacy
March died at Easton, Pennsylvania. A chaired professorship now exists at Lafayette College to honor his achievements in the field of English.
Francis A. March Elementary School, near the Lafayette Campus, is named in his honor.
Sources
★
Encyclopaedia Britannica: Francis March
★
Lafayette: Academic News
★
Simon Winchester, ''
The Meaning of Everything'' (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003).