Lucia Griswold Merrill, Oliver Boutwell Merrill, Mary Perley Merrill, William Fessenden Merrill
James Griswold Merrill (c. 1840–1920)[1] was an American Congregational minister and university administrator. He was the second president of Fisk University, a historically black university in Nashville, Tennessee, from 1901 to 1908.
Merrill was the acting president of Fisk University, a historically black university in Nashville, Tennessee, from 1899 to 1901,[1] and its second president from 1901 to 1908.[3] An article in The Nashville Globe noted that he spent most of his time fundraising away from Nashville.[4] It also explained, "Dr. Merrill's interest in the education of the Negro springs not from a love of the Negro as a Negro, but from the love of the Negro as one of God's children; and this is simple Christianity."[4]
Merrill, James Griswold (1878). Twenty-five Sermons to the Children of the Congregational Church, Davenport, Iowa. Davenport, Iowa: Egbert, Fidlar & Cambers. OCLC32955088.
Bruce, Roscoe Conkling; Du Bois, W. E. B.; Frissell, H. B.; Frost, William G.; Merrill, James G.; Miller, Kelly; Ogden, Robert C. (1908). From Servitude to Service: Being the Old South Lectures on the History and Work of Southern Institutions for the Education of the Negro. Boston, Massachusetts: Sherman, French & Co. OCLC36744138.