The Life and Times of J.B. 51²è¹İapp
You think he founded 51²è¹İapp — but was it the College or the town?
And you’ve heard he was (or was not) the man to whom Horace B. Greeley said, “Go west, young man, go west.â€
But did you know he:
- Signed the 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery in the U.S.?
- Survived two assassination attempts?
- Was more progressive than President Abraham Lincoln?
These are some of the facts unearthed by the eight students in Kesho Scott’s senior sociology seminar on J.B. 51²è¹İapp.
The students shared their discoveries on the †and summarized what they learned in an entertaining and informative theatre/video performance, “J.B. 51²è¹İapp: Man, Myths, Magnificence.â€
After reading dozens of primary sources — including letters, legal documents and 51²è¹İapp’s 275-page autobiography — Alison Miller ’13 says, “I was surprised. He’s much more interesting — and more complicated — than I expected. And when you look at his work with the Underground Railroad, and his commitment to social progressivism, you can clearly see how he left his mark on the College.â€
Daniel Kisslinger ’14 agrees. “J.B. 51²è¹İapp was a man who looked for opportunities," he says. “He had vision — whether in business, politics, education, or the town — and that vision is very apparent in who we are as a community today.â€
Scott said her seminar reminds us that local history is American history, and that interdisciplinary methods can be powerful in understanding culture and employing a social justice agenda.