'Parsonsfield Seminary', founded in
1832, was a well-known
Free Will Baptist school in North
Parsonsfield,
Maine, in the
United States. The first principal, Hosea Quimby, was active in many other Freewill Baptist organizations.

Parsonsfield Seminary
History
The Seminary was deeply involved with the abolitionist movement and was a stop on the
Underground Railroad, while
Oren B. Cheney was principal in the
1840s. Parsonsfield Seminary burned mysteriously in
1854, allegedly by opponents of integration. Over the next 100 years similar arson incidents occurred at black and interracial schools all over rural New England including the
Watchman Institute in Rhode Island in the 1920s.
After it burned,
Bates College (the
Maine State Seminary) in
Lewiston was founded in
1855 to take its place as a larger and more centrally located Free Baptist school. Regardless of this fact, a smaller seminary building was rebuilt in
1857 on the same site in Parsonsfield and existed until
1950s when it closed as a school. From
1840 to
1842, the Free Baptist Biblical School, a Free Baptist graduate school for training ministers, was located at the Seminary (the school was later renamed
Cobb Divinity School and became part of Bates College), .
The Seminary buildings are still maintained by the Friends of the Parsonsfield Seminary. The school is located on Route 160 in Maine. The school was also known as the "North Parsonsfield Seminary."
Notable alumni
★
Oren B. Cheney, abolitionist, Principal of Parsonfield, founder of
Bates College
★
Person C. Cheney,
U.S. Senator from New Hampshire
★
Lorenzo De Medici Sweat,
U.S. Congressman
See also
★
Bates College
★
Cobb Divinity School
★
Lapham Institute
★
Maine Central Institute
★
Storer College
References and external links
★
Robert Greenleaf Leavitt, Maude Lougee Boothby, Dr. Bernard L. Towle, and Kate E. Barker Thursto. ''History of Parsonsfield Seminary: 1932 Centennnial Edition'' (1932).
★
Musical Spoons at Parsem. Site about Parsem, History, and Musical Spoons played at Parsem, Parsonsfield, Maine.