Frederick William Gunn
Gunn's carte-de-visite, 1860s
Born(1816-10-04)October 4, 1816
Washington, Connecticut
DiedAugust 16, 1881(1881-08-16) (aged 64)
Washington, Connecticut
EducationYale University
OccupationEducator
Spouse
Abigail Irene Brinsmade
(m. 1848)
Signature

Frederick William Gunn (October 4, 1816 – August 16, 1881) was an American educator, abolitionist, and outdoorsman, who in 1850 founded The Frederick Gunn School (formerly known as The Gunnery), an independent school in the small town of Washington, Connecticut, and America's first summer camp.[1] An iconoclast and educational reformer, Gunn endured social ostracism and community exile for his abolitionist beliefs in his early life, but was able to return to his hometown of Washington, where, in addition to the school, the library and local history museum were dedicated in his name and that of his wife, Abigail (July 18, 1820 ‒ September 13, 1908).[2] Gunn was a moral beacon for the wider community accepting girls, African Americans, Native Americans, and international students into his school. Among his first students were the children of abolitionist and author Harriet Beecher Stowe[3] and Henry Ward Beecher. A staunch defender of his values and a natural leader of men, Gunn was a conductor on the Underground Railroad,[4] an innovator in curriculum and student development,[5] and is recognized as the originator of leisure camping in the United States.[6] An early proponent of competitive athletics as a critical part of holistic education, Frederick Gunn also appears in what is considered to be the first photograph of a baseball game in progress.[7]

Early life and education

Frederick Gunn has been identified in this first known photograph of a baseball game in progress. It was taken on August 4, 1869 on the Washington Green during the first Gunnery alumni reunion and was featured in Ken Burns' documentary and book Baseball

Frederick William Gunn was born in Washington, Connecticut, on October 4, 1816.[8] The eighth and youngest son of a farmer and admired deputy sheriff, John Northrup (1772-1826), and his wife, Mary (Polly) Ford (1773-1827), Gunn was orphaned at age 10. His parents died "during the prevalence of an epidemic."[9]

Raised and educated by his oldest brother, John, Gunn attended school in Cornwall, Connecticut, in 1829 and studied with the Rev. Watson W. Andrews in a classroom in the First Congregational Meeting House on the Green in Washington from 1831 to 1833.[10] In 1834, he entered the Class of 1837 at Yale University, where he specialized in biology and distinguished himself with his physical prowess at a time when "physical culture in college was then in its infancy," as his former student, U.S. Senator Orville H. Platt wrote, adding, "Had he been in college twenty years later, he would have been first in the University boat crew, the athlete of his class."[11] His distinguished classmates included Morrison Remick "Mott" Waite, who later became Chief Justice of the United States; U.S. Senator William M. Evarts, who served as U.S. Attorney General under President Andrew Jackson; Edwards Pierrepont, who served as U.S. Attorney General under President Ulysses S. Grant; and Benjamin Silliman, Jr., a professor of chemistry at Yale, who wrote of Gunn after his death: "His very distinctly pronounced individuality and his manliness are sharply defined in my memory."[12]

He married Abigail Irene Brinsmade in 1848.[8]

Gunn died at his home in Washington, Connecticut, on August 16, 1881.[8][13]

Nature and camping

Recognized by the American Camp Association as the founder of leisure camping in the United States,[14] Gunn combined his abolitionist beliefs, his belief that physical fitness and sports are key pieces of an educational curriculum, and his love of nature and the outdoors when he marched his students 40 miles from Washington to Milford, Connecticut, in 1861.[15] At Welch's Point, the students camped, fished, cooked over the fire and practiced military drills to prepare them for service in the Union Army and the onset of the Civil War.[16]

After the war, due to the popularity of the Milford camps in 1861, 1863 and 1865, Gunn initiated a summer semester at Point Beautiful on Lake Waramaug, four miles from his school in Washington. He invited alumni and parents as well as students to participate in camping activities such as evening sing-alongs, fishing, swimming and boating. These camps continued from 1867 to 1879, two years before Gunn's death.[17] In 1893, A.S. Gregg Clarke, an 1889 alumnus of The Gunnery, "revived the old Gunnery camp, which had been discontinued when he was a pupil"[18] and went on to found the Keewaydin Camps, the oldest continuously operating summer camps in North America.[19]

In 1986, the American Camp Association commemorated the 125th anniversary of Gunn's first summer camp by replicating the 1861 walk to Milford, where some 1,500 campers from around the world camped at Gulf Beach. The first camps are commemorated annually in early October, on a date close to that of Gunn's birth, when the entire student body of his school, along with faculty, staff, family, alumni and friends hike the nearby Steep Rock Preserve,[1] which was established in 1889 by Ehrick Rossiter, an 1871 Gunnery alumnus.[20]

References

  1. 1 2 Krimsky, Paula Gibson. "Reading, Writing, and the Great Outdoors: Frederick Gunn's School Transforms Victorian-era Education". Connecticut History. Retrieved November 27, 2018.
  2. "Gunn Memorial Library & Museum". Historic Buildings of Connecticut.
  3. Hedrick, Joan D. (1994). Harriet Beecher Stowe: A Life. Oxford University Press. p. 457. ISBN 978-0-19-506639-5.
  4. Strother, Horatio (1962). The Underground Railroad in Connecticut. Wesleyan University Press. pp. 123–124.
  5. Gibson, William Hamilton, ed. (1887). The Master of The Gunnery: A Memorial to Frederick William Gunn. New York: The Gunn Memorial Association. p. 173.
  6. Turner, Ross (January 2018). "Great Things Have Small Beginnings". Camping Magazine. American Camp Association.
  7. New Milford Historical Society (2015). New Milford Revisited. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. p. 57. ISBN 9781439652138.
  8. 1 2 3 The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography. Vol. XIII. James T. White & Company. 1906. pp. 349–350. Retrieved August 22, 2020 via Google Books.
  9. Gibson, William Hamilton, ed. (1887). The Master of The Gunnery: A Memorial of Frederick William Gunn. New York: The Gunn Memorial Association. pp. 19–22.
  10. Gibson, William Hamilton, ed. (1887). The Master of The Gunnery: A Memorial of Frederick William Gunn. New York: The Gunn Memorial Association. pp. 22–24.
  11. Gibson, William Hamilton, ed. (1887). The Master of The Gunnery: A Memorial of Frederick William Gunn. New York: The Gunn Memorial Association. p. 25.
  12. Gibson, William Hamilton, ed. (1887). The Master of The Gunnery: A Memorial of Frederick William Gunn. New York: The Gunn Memorial Association. pp. 24–26.
  13. "Frederick W. Gunn, Teacher". The Morning Journal-Courier. August 18, 1881. p. 4. Retrieved August 22, 2020 via Newspapers.com.
  14. "American Camp Association Celebrating 100 Years: 1910-2010; Timeline". American Camp Association.
  15. Cohen, Rich (July 8, 2022). "The Life Lessons of Summer Camp". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved July 13, 2022.
  16. Gibson, William Hamilton (1887). The Master of The Gunnery: A Memorial of Frederick William Gunn. New York: The Gunn Memorial Association. p. 98.
  17. Korpalski, Adam (1977). The Gunnery 1850-1975: A Documentary History of Private Education in America. Adam Korpalski. ISBN 0686230051.
  18. Sargent, Porter (1935). A Handbook of Summer Camps: An Annual Survey, Volume 12. Boston: Porter Sargent. p. 85.
  19. Back, Brian (1983). The Keewaydin Way: A Portrait, 1893-1983. Keewaydin Camp. ISBN 9780969137818.
  20. "About Steep Rock". Steep Rock Association. October 13, 2018.
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