George Addison Baxter (July 22, 1771 – April 24, 1841) was an educator, American university administrator, theologian and author. He served as President of Washington and Lee University from 1799 to 1829 and Hampden–Sydney College from 1835 until his death.[3]
Baxter was licensed to preach in the Presbyterian Church (USA) on 21 April 1797.[4] He stayed active in ministry to supplement income as he turned to teaching. He left Principalship at New London Academy (Virginia) in 1798 to become Professor of Mathematics, Natural Philosophy and Astronomy at Liberty Hall.[5] He then served as President of his alma mater, 1799–1829 in transitions as Liberty Hall was restyled Washington Academy and then Washington College. From 1832 he chaired Theology at Union Theological Seminary, Hampden–Sydney College at Prince Edward County, Virginia (now Union Presbyterian Seminary at Richmond, Virginia). From 1835 until his death, Baxter served as acting President of Hampden–Sydney.[6]
He was a published author.[7] His longest text may have been An Essay on the Abolition of Slavery, published at Richmond (1836).[8] It argued slaves were better off in subjugation than they would be in freedom. It was response to heightened espousal for abolition, especially as promulgated by Brown University President Francis Wayland. Essays include A sermon, preached at Bethel, on the ordination of the Rev. William M'Pheters (1806), An address of the committee, appointed by the Bible Society of Lexington Virginia: to the people of Rockbridge County, soliciting their patronage to said society (1812), Sermon preached before the Presbytery of Lexington, at the installation of the Rev. Thomas Caldwell (1825), Essay on Baptism (1833), and Parity: the Scriptural order of the Christian ministry (1840). Inaugural address of the Rev. G.A. Baxter: on his induction into the Professorship of Christian Theology in Union Theological Seminary went into print in 1832.
Death and legacy
Baxter died in 1841. He was interred at Union Presbyterian Seminary Cemetery, Prince Edward County, Virginia.[9] One face of his obelisk is composed in Latin.
White devotes most of p. 275 to men of subsequent attainment who were at Washington College during Baxter's tenure. Trustees of Washington and Lee University in 1892 compiled death notices paying tribute to Baxter.[10]
^White, Henry Alexander (1898). "George Addison Baxter, D. D."(PDF). Union Seminary Magazine. Richmond, VA: Union Theological Seminary. Retrieved 2021-09-04.