Being the "Father of Indiana University" for his work in creating the school.
David Hervey Maxwell (September 17, 1786 โ May 24, 1854) was an American physician and Whiglegislator. He is known as the "Father of Indiana University" because of his successful efforts in lobbying to have the State Seminary located in Bloomington.[1] Throughout his life he served on the Indiana University Board of Trustees and various political offices.[2]
While residing in Danville he married Mary E. Dunn, herself a daughter of an Irishimmigrant, on September 12, 1809. The next year he moved to Jefferson County, Indiana, where he would reside and practice medicine until 1819. On April 13, 1813, he was called into service for the War of 1812, where he served as a surgeon with the rank of Private[4][unreliable source?] in the Mounted Rangers of his brother-in-law, Captain Williamson Dunn,[5][6] until being discharged from service on March 1, 1814.[1] During his service he lost his medical instruments due to flooding and was later reimbursed by Congress.[7]
Career
Delegate to the 1816 Constitution Convention
In 1816, forty-three men from across Indiana were invited to Corydon to consider statehood for Indiana. David Maxwell was sent as delegate to represent Jefferson county. As a delegate he wrote Article IX section 2 of the Indiana State Constitution[1] which established the state's duty to provide a statewide system of education.[8]
Move to Bloomington
In 1818, David Maxwell purchased a lot of land in present day Bloomington when it was first platted.[1][9] The following year in May 1819 he moved to a log cabin on the lot. There on September 25, 1819, the First Presbyterian Church was founded when nine people gathered in Maxwell's home to meet with Isaac Reed, a Presbyterianmissionary.[10]
Early political career and the creation of the Indiana State Seminary
David Harvey Maxwell served numerous terms in the Indiana General Assembly. First in the 4th general Assembly starting December 6, 1819, when he joined the Assembly and pushed for the creation of the state seminary, the precursor to Indiana University. On January 20, 1820, "An Act to Establish a State Seminary and for Other Purposes" was approved and established a six man board of Trustees to meet in June 1820 to decide upon a location for the seminary within Perry Township.[11][12] David Harvey was appointed to and elected President of the board.[1][13] He would go on to serve as on the Indiana University Board of Trustees from 1820 until 1837 and again from 1839 until 1852.[2][14][15]
PresidentZachary Taylor reappointed David Maxwell as a postmaster restoring Whig control. Maxwell once more served as Postmaster from 1849 until 1852.
Personal life
Maxwell married Mary E. Dunn of Danville, Kentucky, on September 21, 1809.[1] She was the daughter of Samuel Dunn an Irish-American immigrant from County Down, Ireland. Together they had 10 children, including Dr. James Darwin Maxwell (b. 1815).[18][19] Dr. James Darwin Maxwell was one of the youngest people to ever attend Indiana University gaining admission at the age of eight.[20]
David Maxwell died on May 24, 1854. His final words were said to have been "Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace."[1] The beginning of the Nunc Dimittis.
Maxwell's legacy lives on through Indiana University. In 1889, the Dean of the IU School of Law described Maxwell in his writings chronicling the history of Indiana University: "So unremitting was he in his labors in its behalf, and to such good purpose were they directed, that it can better be said of him than of any other, 'He was the Father of the Indiana University.'"[13]
In 1890, Maxwell Hall, then Library Hall, was built on the IU Bloomington campus having been designed by ArchitectGeorge Buntig to reflect the Romanesque Revival style. It was renamed in 1894 to honor David Maxwell.[22] Initially serving as a library, today the building houses the Gayle Karch Cook Center for Public Arts and Humanities.[23] The center is named in honor of Gayle Karch Cook. A graduate of IU with a B.A. in fine arts and a later honorary Doctor of Humane Letters. In 2015, Cook was recognized with the College of Arts and Sciences Distinguished Alumni Award.[24]