'Henry Dunster' (
November 26,
1609 –
February 27,
1659) was an English-American
Puritan clergyman and educator. Born at
Baleholt,
Bury,
Lancashire, England to Henry Dunster Sr (1582–1626) and Isabelle Kaye (1583–1643), Dunster studied and graduated from
Magdalene College, Cambridge,
Cambridgeshire, England specializing in oriental languages and temporarily became a teacher there until he emigrated to
Boston,
Suffolk County, Massachusetts in
1640. When Master
Nathaniel Eaton was dismissed in
1639 as the first leader of the recently-established
Harvard College, in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, Dunster was appointed as his successor. Thus on
August 27,
1640 Dunster became the first president of Harvard. (For a discussion of Dunster's choice of the title "president" see
President, history of the term.) He modeled Harvard's educational system on that of the English universities, which included that of
Eton College as well as
Cambridge University.
In
1653, Dunster refused to have his child — Jonathan (1653–1725) — baptized, confessing himself an
antipaedobaptist. For this
heterodoxy, he was forced to resign from Harvard in
1654, although it was with much regret that he was sent away, since he was universally well-respected there. He spent the last few years of his life as a pastor in
Scituate, Massachusetts, before passing away in
1659.
Dunster House, one of the twelve residential houses of
Harvard University, is named after Henry Dunster.
Dunster had at least two wives: Elizabeth (Harris) Glover, the widow of Josse Glover, whom he married on
June 21,
1641, but who died without issue in
1643; and Elizabeth Atkinson (1627–1690) whom he married in
1644 and bore to him five children. Samuel Dunster, who wrote the exhaustive biography of the descendants of Henry Dunster in 1876, ''infra'', is his direct descendant.
Sources
★ Samuel Dunster, ''Henry Dunster and His Descendants'' (1876) [exhaustive biography by a direct descendant, cf. especially pp. 1–19]
★
Samuel Eliot Morison, ''Builders of the Bay Colony'' (1930) [chapter entitled "Henry Dunster, President of Harvard", pp. 183–216]
★ William Thaddeus Harris, ''Epitaphs From the Old Burying Ground in Cambridge'' (1845) p. 169 [Henry Dunster, "d. 12.27.1658"]