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Philander Chase

Philander Chase (December 14, 1775 – September 20, 1852) was an Episcopal Church bishop, educator, and pioneer of the United States western frontier, especially in Ohio and Illinois.


Philander Chase
6th Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church
ChurchEpiscopal Church
In office1843–1852
PredecessorAlexander Viets Griswold
SuccessorThomas Church Brownell
Other post(s)Bishop of Illinois (1835-1852)
Orders
OrdinationNovember 10, 1799
by Samuel Provoost
ConsecrationFebruary 11, 1819
by William White
Personal details
BornDecember 14, 1775
Cornish, New Hampshire, United States
DiedSeptember 20, 1852(1852-09-20) (aged 76)
Brimfield, Illinois, United States
BuriedJubilee College
NationalityAmerican
DenominationAnglican
ParentsDudley Chase & Alice Corbett
SpouseMary Fay (m. 1796; d. 1818)
Sophia May Ingraham (m. 1819)
Children6
Previous post(s)Bishop of Ohio (1819-1832)
Signature
Sainthood
Feast daySeptember 22
Venerated inEpiscopal Church

Early life and family edit

Born in Cornish, New Hampshire, to one of the town's founders, Dudley Chase, and his wife Allace Corbett, Philander Chase was the youngest of fourteen children, and ultimately survived all his siblings.[1] His ancestors had been Puritans who fled to New England. His father, a deacon at their local Congregational church, wanted one of his five sons to become a minister. As had three of his brothers (who however, had no inclinations toward ministry), Philander enrolled at Dartmouth College.[2] As a student, Chase became acquainted with the Book of Common Prayer and became a lay reader in the Episcopal Church.[3] After graduating in 1795, he worked as a lay reader in various New England towns while studying for ordination. Thus, he helped establish Trinity Church in his hometown.[4] He studied with Rev. Thomas Ellison, rector of St. Peter's Church in Albany, New York, while supporting himself teaching at the newly organized city school.

He married Mary Fay, of Hardwick, Massachusetts. They had three sons: Dudley, George (1797–?), and Philander (1800–1824) before her death (after many years of health problems) in May, 1818. Chase remarried to Sophia May Ingraham (1783–1864) the following summer and had three children, Henry (1820–1896), Mary (1822–1894) and Philander (1824–1872).

While Philander Chase was bishop of Ohio (as discussed below), his 12-year-old nephew, Salmon P. Chase became his ward (his father having died). Rev. Chase oversaw the younger man's education in Worthington. The younger Chase then entered Cincinnati College and went on to become a statesman and jurist of note, including Chief Justice of the United States.[5] His brother Dudley Chase also achieved distinction (as U.S. Senator from Vermont), as did his nephew Dudley Chase Denison (U.S. Representative from Vermont).

Ministry edit

On May 10, 1798, Bishop Samuel Provoost ordained Chase deacon at St. George's Chapel on Long Island, New York, and also ordained Robert Wetmore to the priesthood. Both were assigned missionary duties in the state's northern and western parts Chase became one of only three Episcopal clergymen above the Highlands. Wetmore found himself unsuited to the rigorous travels, and settled at Schenectady, while Chase continued evangelizing on horseback, as well as baptizing, preaching and otherwise meeting the needs of widely scattered Episcopalians and other Protestants in the more rural areas—from Troy to Lake George to Auburn and Bloomfield. In 1798, he helped to organize the first congregation of Trinity Church in Utica, New York and the following year what would become St. John's Episcopal Church, Canandaigua, as well as preached to the Mohawk in Canajoharie (where a church had been established by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel).

In 1799, the Rev. Chase accepted a position to serve congregations in Poughkeepsie, New York and relatively nearby Fishkill. After the Rt. Rev. Provoost ordained him as a priest at St. Paul's Church in New York City on November 10, he called for his wife to join him. Chase then taught school in Poughkeepsie and served more than five years at Christ Church, which the Rt. Rev. Samuel Seabury had founded as a mission more than three decades earlier (but whose Loyalist rector had left during the American Revolution).[6]

In 1805 the Rev. Chase accepted a challenge to establish the first Episcopal congregation in Louisiana, becoming the founding rector of what ultimately became Christ Church Cathedral, New Orleans. He and Mary had moved south hoping to cure her tuberculosis. They left their children with relatives in New England. Despite the successful parish organization and profitability of his school, they missed their children. With a bank loan, Chase had purchased a 19-year-old slave named Jack for $500 to become their house servant.[7] After three months, Jack escaped, boarding a steamer bound for Liverpool, "a hard blow and humiliating as well" for Chase.[8] In 1819, Jack returned to New Orleans and was captured; Chase, by then long gone from Louisiana, emancipated him rather than have him sold.[8]

When Mary's health seemed to improve, and wanting to oversee the further education of their sons George and Philander (accepted at the Cheshire Academy), the Rev. Chase accepted a position as rector of Christ Church, Hartford, Connecticut in 1811, where he would serve six years (his autobiography called them the "Sunshine Years").[9]

However, Chase continued to feel a call to evangelize and remained deeply interested in the religious condition and prospects of the westward pioneers. He also disagreed on educational and other matters with Bishop Provoost's successor, the Rt. Rev. John Henry Hobart. Thus, in 1817 the Rev. Chase traveled to Ohio, and on March 16, 1817, preached his first sermon in the new state, at Conneaut Creek near Salem. He continued to evangelize on the frontier building on the missionary work of the Rev. Dr. Joseph Doddridge in the Ohio Valley and the Rev. Roger Searle in the Western Reserve.[10] Chase reached Cincinnati in May, and helping to form what later became Christ Church Cathedral. Chase bought a farm in the relatively new town of Worthington (founded 1803), agreed to serve five parishes nearby, and became principal of Worthington Academy. He then called his family to join him in Cleveland. The Rev. Chase chaired the first Episcopal convention in Ohio, which began on January 5, 1818. In May his wife died. In June, Ohio clergy (six) and laymen met again in Worthington and elected him as their bishop (an unfunded position).[11]

Episcopacy edit

Chase traveled east for ordination that winter, but was initially forced to defend his character before the Standing Committee would give its assent. Elderly Presiding Bishop William White led the consecration service at St. James Episcopal Church in Philadelphia on February 11, 1819, assisted by Bishop Hobart of New York, Bishop Kemp of Maryland and Bishop Croes of New Jersey.[12] He was the 18th bishop consecrated in The Episcopal Church.

Bishop Chase returned on horseback to his diocese, conducting a service at Zanesville on the National Road on February 28 and reaching his home in early March. Between June 1820 and June 1821, he preached 200 times, baptised fifty people, and confirmed another 175 while traveling 1,279 miles on horseback.[13] The following year, he accepted the presidency of Cincinnati Academy, hoping to ease his fiscal crunch. Chase continued to build up the church in that state, lobbying for a seminary in his state (contrary to Bishop Hobart's belief that the General Theological Seminary in New York sufficed) and requesting missionaries from coastal states (The Rev. Ethan Allen was among those answering the call).[9]

In October 1823, Chase even sailed to England (armed only with a letter of introduction from Henry Clay) to raise funds for his frontier diocese, especially his planned school and seminary. During his fundraising tour of the British Isles he was accompanied in his efforts by the Thomas Burgess,[14] who was Bishop of St Davids and the founder of St David's College. The largest donation came from Jane, Dowager Countess of Rosse,[15] while a collection of books was donated by Bishop Thomas Burgess. By the following July, they had raised nearly $30,000, and Chase started home. In November 1824 the Ohio convention authorized the seminary and the purchase of 8,000 acres in Knox County. In December, 1824 the Ohio Legislature chartered Kenyon College and Bexley Hall seminary (named after major donors Lord Kenyon and Baron Bexley). The foundation was somewhat bittersweet, for Philander Chase Jr., who had become an Episcopal priest like his father and accepted a position in South Carolina, died.

Though Chase had initially donated his Worthington farm for the school, realizing it needed more land, he purchased 8000 acres in Knox County northeast of Worthington, naming the location Gambier after another major donor, Lord Gambier. Chase hoped to establish a self-sufficient community free of urban vices (such as drinking and dancing), which would help students focus on their studies. The new institution included a grammar school as well as a college, post office, grist and sawmill, farm and printing press. His wife Sophia not only cooked for the students, did their laundry and nursed them, but kept the school running during her husband's many fundraising trips. However, his management style proved controversial with the trustees (among others). Some did not believe a bishop should hold so many positions, so the Ohio Convention of 1831 asked him to relinquish some control. Instead, on September 9, 1831, Chase resigned his bishopric, as well as positions at the school and college.[16] He was succeeded as Bishop and college president by Charles McIlvaine.[17]

Chase then moved his family about twenty miles away, to a new farm he had purchased near Millersburg, which he called the "Valley of Peace". The following spring, the missionary call returned, and he moved his family to Gilead, Michigan and began evangelizing again.

Meanwhile, in 1835, Episcopalians who had moved further west had decided that they needed a separate diocese, and established the Diocese of Illinois. Although Chase did not participate in that convention, he accepted their call to be their bishop (the first Episcopal bishop of Illinois), and soon moved to near Peoria, Illinois.

However, Chase still dreamed of establishing a self-sufficient rural college, and traveled to England first to raise funds for what became Jubilee College in Brimfield, Illinois. The cornerstone was laid in 1839.[18] Fundraising proved more difficult this time, so Chase undertook another tour, this time in the southern states while his cousin Samuel handled operations, his sons Henry, Philander and Dudley handled the farm and sheep, and his daughter Mary ran a small girls' boarding school. The chapel was finished in 1840–1. However, fire destroyed the saw and grist mill in 1849.[18]

Meanwhile, Chase grew in seniority. In 1843, he became the sixth Presiding Bishop of the national church.

Death and legacy edit

 
Grave monument in Jubilee Cemetery next to Jubilee College in Peoria County, Illinois

Chase spent the final years of his life founding Jubilee College and the surrounding frontier community near present-day Peoria, Illinois. On September 14, 1852, while riding with his wife in a carriage near their home, it overturned. Chase was thrown and suffered a concussion. He told those carrying him home, "You may now order my coffin, --I am glad of it!"[19][1][3] He died in his sleep on the 20th, and was buried at Jubilee's cemetery.

The college faced financial difficulties after his death and closed within a decade. After service as a chaplain in the Civil War, Samuel Chase attempted to revive the college, but failed and sold off some land in 1871. However, the core of the college (other than the cemetery) was donated to State of Illinois, which restored some college buildings in the 1970s (after which it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places). Although the college buildings have generally remained closed since 2008 due to state budget cuts, the surrounding park remains open, including picnic and camping areas. His papers are held by Kenyon College.

The liturgical calendar of the Episcopal Church (USA) remembers Bishop Chase annually on September 22.[20]

Writings edit

  • Christianity and Masonry Reconciled (1814)
  • A Plea for the West (1826)
  • The Star in the West, or Kenyon College (1828)
  • Defense of Kenyon College (1831)
  • A Plea for Jubilee (1835)
  • Reminiscences: An Autobiography (First Edition, 1841), (Second Edition, 1848, various publishers in 2 volumes)[21]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Chase, Virginius H. (1947). "Jubilee College and Its Founder". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 40 (2): 154–167. ISSN 0019-2287.
  2. ^ John N. Norton, Life of Bishop Chase pp. 13-14 (New York: General Protestant Episcopal Sunday School Union, 1857)
  3. ^ a b Muller, James Arthur (1945). "Philander Chase and the Frontier". Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church. 14 (2): 168–184. ISSN 0018-2486.
  4. ^ Trinity Church
  5. ^ Ripley, George; Dana, Charles A., eds. (1879). "Chase, Salmon Portland" . The American Cyclopædia.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on September 25, 2015. Retrieved September 23, 2015.
  7. ^ Philander Chase (1848). Bishop Chase's Reminiscences: An Autobiography, Volume 1 (2 ed.). J. B. Dow. OCLC 1049070754.
  8. ^ a b Laura Chase Smith (1903). The Life of Philander Chase: First Bishop of Ohio and Illinois, Founder of Kenyon and Jubilee Colleges. E.P. Dutton. ISBN 978-0-7950-1013-2. OCLC 215066265.
  9. ^ a b Ripley, George; Dana, Charles A., eds. (1879). "Chase, Philander" . The American Cyclopædia.
  10. ^ Richards, Samuel (Autumn 2018). "The East-West Divide and Frontier Efforts of the Reverend Dr. Joseph Doddridge". Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies. 85:4 (4): 460–487. doi:10.5325/pennhistory.85.4.0460. JSTOR 10.5325/pennhistory.85.4.0460. S2CID 149943936.
  11. ^ Norton pp. 38, 43
  12. ^ Norton pp. 38-39
  13. ^ Norton p. 44
  14. ^ Kenyon College – Alumni Digest
  15. ^ Greenslade Jr., Thomas B. . Kenyon College. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013.
  16. ^ "A Biography of Philander Chase".
  17. ^ The Last Page 2006-09-03 at the Wayback Machine – Kenyon alumni bulletin has a succession of early college presidents. Retrieved on November 21, 2006
  18. ^ a b Norwood, Percy V. (1943). "Jubilee College, Illinois". Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church. 12 (1): 44–58. ISSN 0018-2486.
  19. ^ Norton p. 97
  20. ^ Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2018. Church Publishing, Inc. December 17, 2019. ISBN 978-1-64065-235-4.
  21. ^ "Bishop Chase's Reminiscences: An autobiography. 2d ed.; comprising a history of the principal events in the author's life to A.D. 1847". Boston J.B. Dow. 1848.

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Laura Chase Smith, The Life of Philander Chase (New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., 1903)

External links edit

  • Who was Philander Chase? Biography at Kenyon College
  • Papers of Philander Chase Kenyon College project to put documents online
  • PhilanderChaseCorporation Land Trust Gambier, Ohio
  • http://www.kenyon.edu/philanderchase.xml
Episcopal Church (USA) titles
Preceded by
New Diocese
1st Bishop of Ohio
1819 – 1832
Succeeded by
Preceded by
New Diocese
1st Bishop of Illinois
1835 – September 20, 1852
Succeeded by
Preceded by 6th Presiding Bishop
February 15, 1843 – September 20, 1852
Succeeded by
Academic offices
Preceded by
Elijah Slack
President of Cincinnati College
1822 – 1823
Succeeded by
Preceded by
New
President of Kenyon College
(and Bexley Hall)

1824 – 1831
Succeeded by
Preceded by
New
President of Jubilee College
1839 – 1852
Succeeded by
Closed

philander, chase, december, 1775, september, 1852, episcopal, church, bishop, educator, pioneer, united, states, western, frontier, especially, ohio, illinois, most, reverend6th, presiding, bishop, episcopal, churchchurchepiscopal, churchin, office1843, 1852pr. Philander Chase December 14 1775 September 20 1852 was an Episcopal Church bishop educator and pioneer of the United States western frontier especially in Ohio and Illinois The Most ReverendPhilander Chase6th Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal ChurchChurchEpiscopal ChurchIn office1843 1852PredecessorAlexander Viets GriswoldSuccessorThomas Church BrownellOther post s Bishop of Illinois 1835 1852 OrdersOrdinationNovember 10 1799by Samuel ProvoostConsecrationFebruary 11 1819by William WhitePersonal detailsBornDecember 14 1775Cornish New Hampshire United StatesDiedSeptember 20 1852 1852 09 20 aged 76 Brimfield Illinois United StatesBuriedJubilee CollegeNationalityAmericanDenominationAnglicanParentsDudley Chase amp Alice CorbettSpouseMary Fay m 1796 d 1818 Sophia May Ingraham m 1819 Children6Previous post s Bishop of Ohio 1819 1832 SignatureSainthoodFeast daySeptember 22Venerated inEpiscopal Church Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Ministry 3 Episcopacy 4 Death and legacy 5 Writings 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life and family editSee also Chase family Born in Cornish New Hampshire to one of the town s founders Dudley Chase and his wife Allace Corbett Philander Chase was the youngest of fourteen children and ultimately survived all his siblings 1 His ancestors had been Puritans who fled to New England His father a deacon at their local Congregational church wanted one of his five sons to become a minister As had three of his brothers who however had no inclinations toward ministry Philander enrolled at Dartmouth College 2 As a student Chase became acquainted with the Book of Common Prayer and became a lay reader in the Episcopal Church 3 After graduating in 1795 he worked as a lay reader in various New England towns while studying for ordination Thus he helped establish Trinity Church in his hometown 4 He studied with Rev Thomas Ellison rector of St Peter s Church in Albany New York while supporting himself teaching at the newly organized city school He married Mary Fay of Hardwick Massachusetts They had three sons Dudley George 1797 and Philander 1800 1824 before her death after many years of health problems in May 1818 Chase remarried to Sophia May Ingraham 1783 1864 the following summer and had three children Henry 1820 1896 Mary 1822 1894 and Philander 1824 1872 While Philander Chase was bishop of Ohio as discussed below his 12 year old nephew Salmon P Chase became his ward his father having died Rev Chase oversaw the younger man s education in Worthington The younger Chase then entered Cincinnati College and went on to become a statesman and jurist of note including Chief Justice of the United States 5 His brother Dudley Chase also achieved distinction as U S Senator from Vermont as did his nephew Dudley Chase Denison U S Representative from Vermont Ministry editOn May 10 1798 Bishop Samuel Provoost ordained Chase deacon at St George s Chapel on Long Island New York and also ordained Robert Wetmore to the priesthood Both were assigned missionary duties in the state s northern and western parts Chase became one of only three Episcopal clergymen above the Highlands Wetmore found himself unsuited to the rigorous travels and settled at Schenectady while Chase continued evangelizing on horseback as well as baptizing preaching and otherwise meeting the needs of widely scattered Episcopalians and other Protestants in the more rural areas from Troy to Lake George to Auburn and Bloomfield In 1798 he helped to organize the first congregation of Trinity Church in Utica New York and the following year what would become St John s Episcopal Church Canandaigua as well as preached to the Mohawk in Canajoharie where a church had been established by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel In 1799 the Rev Chase accepted a position to serve congregations in Poughkeepsie New York and relatively nearby Fishkill After the Rt Rev Provoost ordained him as a priest at St Paul s Church in New York City on November 10 he called for his wife to join him Chase then taught school in Poughkeepsie and served more than five years at Christ Church which the Rt Rev Samuel Seabury had founded as a mission more than three decades earlier but whose Loyalist rector had left during the American Revolution 6 In 1805 the Rev Chase accepted a challenge to establish the first Episcopal congregation in Louisiana becoming the founding rector of what ultimately became Christ Church Cathedral New Orleans He and Mary had moved south hoping to cure her tuberculosis They left their children with relatives in New England Despite the successful parish organization and profitability of his school they missed their children With a bank loan Chase had purchased a 19 year old slave named Jack for 500 to become their house servant 7 After three months Jack escaped boarding a steamer bound for Liverpool a hard blow and humiliating as well for Chase 8 In 1819 Jack returned to New Orleans and was captured Chase by then long gone from Louisiana emancipated him rather than have him sold 8 When Mary s health seemed to improve and wanting to oversee the further education of their sons George and Philander accepted at the Cheshire Academy the Rev Chase accepted a position as rector of Christ Church Hartford Connecticut in 1811 where he would serve six years his autobiography called them the Sunshine Years 9 However Chase continued to feel a call to evangelize and remained deeply interested in the religious condition and prospects of the westward pioneers He also disagreed on educational and other matters with Bishop Provoost s successor the Rt Rev John Henry Hobart Thus in 1817 the Rev Chase traveled to Ohio and on March 16 1817 preached his first sermon in the new state at Conneaut Creek near Salem He continued to evangelize on the frontier building on the missionary work of the Rev Dr Joseph Doddridge in the Ohio Valley and the Rev Roger Searle in the Western Reserve 10 Chase reached Cincinnati in May and helping to form what later became Christ Church Cathedral Chase bought a farm in the relatively new town of Worthington founded 1803 agreed to serve five parishes nearby and became principal of Worthington Academy He then called his family to join him in Cleveland The Rev Chase chaired the first Episcopal convention in Ohio which began on January 5 1818 In May his wife died In June Ohio clergy six and laymen met again in Worthington and elected him as their bishop an unfunded position 11 Episcopacy editChase traveled east for ordination that winter but was initially forced to defend his character before the Standing Committee would give its assent Elderly Presiding Bishop William White led the consecration service at St James Episcopal Church in Philadelphia on February 11 1819 assisted by Bishop Hobart of New York Bishop Kemp of Maryland and Bishop Croes of New Jersey 12 He was the 18th bishop consecrated in The Episcopal Church Bishop Chase returned on horseback to his diocese conducting a service at Zanesville on the National Road on February 28 and reaching his home in early March Between June 1820 and June 1821 he preached 200 times baptised fifty people and confirmed another 175 while traveling 1 279 miles on horseback 13 The following year he accepted the presidency of Cincinnati Academy hoping to ease his fiscal crunch Chase continued to build up the church in that state lobbying for a seminary in his state contrary to Bishop Hobart s belief that the General Theological Seminary in New York sufficed and requesting missionaries from coastal states The Rev Ethan Allen was among those answering the call 9 In October 1823 Chase even sailed to England armed only with a letter of introduction from Henry Clay to raise funds for his frontier diocese especially his planned school and seminary During his fundraising tour of the British Isles he was accompanied in his efforts by the Thomas Burgess 14 who was Bishop of St Davids and the founder of St David s College The largest donation came from Jane Dowager Countess of Rosse 15 while a collection of books was donated by Bishop Thomas Burgess By the following July they had raised nearly 30 000 and Chase started home In November 1824 the Ohio convention authorized the seminary and the purchase of 8 000 acres in Knox County In December 1824 the Ohio Legislature chartered Kenyon College and Bexley Hall seminary named after major donors Lord Kenyon and Baron Bexley The foundation was somewhat bittersweet for Philander Chase Jr who had become an Episcopal priest like his father and accepted a position in South Carolina died Though Chase had initially donated his Worthington farm for the school realizing it needed more land he purchased 8000 acres in Knox County northeast of Worthington naming the location Gambier after another major donor Lord Gambier Chase hoped to establish a self sufficient community free of urban vices such as drinking and dancing which would help students focus on their studies The new institution included a grammar school as well as a college post office grist and sawmill farm and printing press His wife Sophia not only cooked for the students did their laundry and nursed them but kept the school running during her husband s many fundraising trips However his management style proved controversial with the trustees among others Some did not believe a bishop should hold so many positions so the Ohio Convention of 1831 asked him to relinquish some control Instead on September 9 1831 Chase resigned his bishopric as well as positions at the school and college 16 He was succeeded as Bishop and college president by Charles McIlvaine 17 Chase then moved his family about twenty miles away to a new farm he had purchased near Millersburg which he called the Valley of Peace The following spring the missionary call returned and he moved his family to Gilead Michigan and began evangelizing again Meanwhile in 1835 Episcopalians who had moved further west had decided that they needed a separate diocese and established the Diocese of Illinois Although Chase did not participate in that convention he accepted their call to be their bishop the first Episcopal bishop of Illinois and soon moved to near Peoria Illinois However Chase still dreamed of establishing a self sufficient rural college and traveled to England first to raise funds for what became Jubilee College in Brimfield Illinois The cornerstone was laid in 1839 18 Fundraising proved more difficult this time so Chase undertook another tour this time in the southern states while his cousin Samuel handled operations his sons Henry Philander and Dudley handled the farm and sheep and his daughter Mary ran a small girls boarding school The chapel was finished in 1840 1 However fire destroyed the saw and grist mill in 1849 18 Meanwhile Chase grew in seniority In 1843 he became the sixth Presiding Bishop of the national church Death and legacy edit nbsp Grave monument in Jubilee Cemetery next to Jubilee College in Peoria County IllinoisChase spent the final years of his life founding Jubilee College and the surrounding frontier community near present day Peoria Illinois On September 14 1852 while riding with his wife in a carriage near their home it overturned Chase was thrown and suffered a concussion He told those carrying him home You may now order my coffin I am glad of it 19 1 3 He died in his sleep on the 20th and was buried at Jubilee s cemetery The college faced financial difficulties after his death and closed within a decade After service as a chaplain in the Civil War Samuel Chase attempted to revive the college but failed and sold off some land in 1871 However the core of the college other than the cemetery was donated to State of Illinois which restored some college buildings in the 1970s after which it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places Although the college buildings have generally remained closed since 2008 due to state budget cuts the surrounding park remains open including picnic and camping areas His papers are held by Kenyon College The liturgical calendar of the Episcopal Church USA remembers Bishop Chase annually on September 22 20 Writings editChristianity and Masonry Reconciled 1814 A Plea for the West 1826 The Star in the West or Kenyon College 1828 Defense of Kenyon College 1831 A Plea for Jubilee 1835 Reminiscences An Autobiography First Edition 1841 Second Edition 1848 various publishers in 2 volumes 21 See also edit nbsp Christianity portal nbsp Saints portalList of presiding bishops of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America List of Episcopal bishops of the United States Historical list of the Episcopal bishops of the United States Chase familyNotes edit a b Chase Virginius H 1947 Jubilee College and Its Founder Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 40 2 154 167 ISSN 0019 2287 John N Norton Life of Bishop Chase pp 13 14 New York General Protestant Episcopal Sunday School Union 1857 a b Muller James Arthur 1945 Philander Chase and the Frontier Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church 14 2 168 184 ISSN 0018 2486 Trinity Church Ripley George Dana Charles A eds 1879 Chase Salmon Portland The American Cyclopaedia Christ Episcopal Church History Archived from the original on September 25 2015 Retrieved September 23 2015 Philander Chase 1848 Bishop Chase s Reminiscences An Autobiography Volume 1 2 ed J B Dow OCLC 1049070754 a b Laura Chase Smith 1903 The Life of Philander Chase First Bishop of Ohio and Illinois Founder of Kenyon and Jubilee Colleges E P Dutton ISBN 978 0 7950 1013 2 OCLC 215066265 a b Ripley George Dana Charles A eds 1879 Chase Philander The American Cyclopaedia Richards Samuel Autumn 2018 The East West Divide and Frontier Efforts of the Reverend Dr Joseph Doddridge Pennsylvania History A Journal of Mid Atlantic Studies 85 4 4 460 487 doi 10 5325 pennhistory 85 4 0460 JSTOR 10 5325 pennhistory 85 4 0460 S2CID 149943936 Norton pp 38 43 Norton pp 38 39 Norton p 44 Kenyon College Alumni Digest Greenslade Jr Thomas B The Earl of Rosse s Leviathan Telescope Kenyon College Archived from the original on October 29 2013 A Biography of Philander Chase The Last Page Archived 2006 09 03 at the Wayback Machine Kenyon alumni bulletin has a succession of early college presidents Retrieved on November 21 2006 a b Norwood Percy V 1943 Jubilee College Illinois Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church 12 1 44 58 ISSN 0018 2486 Norton p 97 Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2018 Church Publishing Inc December 17 2019 ISBN 978 1 64065 235 4 Bishop Chase s Reminiscences An autobiography 2d ed comprising a history of the principal events in the author s life to A D 1847 Boston J B Dow 1848 References editRines George Edwin ed 1920 Chase Philander Encyclopedia Americana Further reading editLaura Chase Smith The Life of Philander Chase New York E P Dutton amp Co 1903 External links editWho was Philander Chase Biography at Kenyon College Papers of Philander Chase Kenyon College project to put documents online PhilanderChaseCorporation Land Trust Gambier Ohio http www kenyon edu philanderchase xmlEpiscopal Church USA titlesPreceded byNew Diocese 1st Bishop of Ohio1819 1832 Succeeded byCharles Pettit McIlvainePreceded byNew Diocese 1st Bishop of Illinois1835 September 20 1852 Succeeded byHenry J WhitehousePreceded byAlexander Viets Griswold 6th Presiding BishopFebruary 15 1843 September 20 1852 Succeeded byThomas Church BrownellAcademic officesPreceded byElijah Slack President of Cincinnati College1822 1823 Succeeded byWilliam Holmes McGuffeyPreceded byNew President of Kenyon College and Bexley Hall 1824 1831 Succeeded byCharles Pettit McIlvainePreceded byNew President of Jubilee College1839 1852 Succeeded byClosed Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philander Chase amp oldid 1182896649, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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