Andrew Wylie (April 12, 1789 – November 11, 1851) was an American academic and theologian, who was president of Jefferson College (1811–1816) and Washington College (1816–1828) before becoming the first president of Indiana University (1829–1851).[1]
The next year, in 1811, Wylie was elected unanimously to serve as president of Jefferson College. He was licensed to preach in 1812, and in 1813 was ordained as a Presbyterian minister.[citation needed] In 1813 he married Margaret Ritchie, daughter of Craig Richie,[3] a wealthy Canonsburg merchant.
While president of Jefferson College, Wylie led a controversial effort to merge with nearby Washington College. When that effort failed, in 1816 Wylie moved on to become president of Washington College and pastor of the Presbyterian church. In 1825 Wylie was given an honorary Doctorate of Divinity from Union College, in Schenectady, New York. Wylie resigned his presidency in 1828, over a theological dispute among local Presbyterian groups in Washington, Pennsylvania.
He was close friends with William Holmes McGuffey, who lived in Wylie's house for a time; they often would walk the 3 miles to Washington College together.[5]
He guided the school through an important time of transition as the state legislature rechartered the college as Indiana University in 1838.
In 1842, Wylie established the law department at Indiana University, which became the School of Law in 1889.
In Bloomington, Wylie continued to have conflicts with Presbyterians over Calvinist theology. In 1841, he left the Presbyterian Church to become a deacon in the Protestant Episcopal Church, and became an ordained priest in 1842.
Wylie died in office in 1851, after complications from a wood-chopping accident.[7] He is buried in Rose Hill Cemetery in Bloomington, Indiana.[8]
During his time as president at Indiana University, student enrollment increased from 40 to 74 enrolled in the college, 58 in the preparatory department, and 28 in the law department.
Wylie's Bloomington, Indiana home, is preserved as the Wylie House Museum by Indiana University and is administered by the IU Libraries.
Children
Wylie and his wife Margaret (who was born in 1791 and died in 1859) had twelve children: Andrew Jr., William, Mary Ann, Craig Ritchie, Elizabeth, John Hosea, Samuel, Margaret, Irene Catherine, Redick McKee, Anderson McElroy, Jane Melheme.[3]
Works
Wylie, D.D., Andrew (June 1833). Rev. S.C. Jennings (ed.). "Sermon XIV: The Nature of Faith". The Presbyterian Preacher. II (1). Pittsburgh: D. and M. MacLean: 193–208 – via Google Books.
^"Andrew Wylie (1812-1816)". U. Grant Miller Library Digital Archives. Washington & Jefferson College. 2003-09-04. Archived from the original on 2019-12-09. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
^Bloomington Days: Town and Gown in Middle America By Blaise Cronin pg. 190