1832 Annual Report of the the American Education Society

Book

Sixteenth Annual Report of the Directors of the American Education Society, Presented at the Annual Meeting, Boston, 1832. Boston: Printed for the Society by Perkins & Marvin, 1832. Octavo. This Sixteenth Annual Report of the American Education Society documents the activities, finances, and ideological priorities of one of the most influential early nineteenth-century Protestant educational reform organizations in the United States. Founded in 1815, the Society was central to the effort to train and place “indigent but pious” young men into the Protestant ministry, reflecting the close relationship between education, religion, and moral reform in the antebellum period. The 1832 report, presented at the Society’s annual meeting in Boston, offers contemporary insight into institutional governance, donor networks, and the expansion of theological education during a period of rapid national growth and religious revival.

The report situates the American Education Society within the broader context of early American benevolent and missionary organizations, which sought to shape national character through education grounded in evangelical Protestant values. Annual reports such as this were intended not only as administrative records but also as persuasive documents, designed to demonstrate accountability to subscribers while promoting continued financial and moral support. As such, the volume serves as a primary source for the study of early American educational philanthropy, religious reform movements, and the institutional structures that underpinned nineteenth-century clerical training and social influence.
Condition: Disbound, lacking original wrappers. Moderate edge wear, text complete and legible.

Item #20012

Price: $100.00