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Timothy Dwight

Timothy Dwight IV (May 14, 1752–January 11, 1817) was an American Congregationalist preacher, theologian, educator, and poet, best known as the eighth president of Yale College (1795–1817) and a driving force in the Second Great Awakening. Born in Northampton, Massachusetts, to Timothy Dwight III, a merchant and Revolutionary War soldier, and Mary Edwards, daughter of Jonathan Edwards, he was a prodigy—learning the alphabet in one lesson and reading the Bible by age four. Entering Yale at 13, he graduated in 1769, tutored there (1771–1777), and served as a chaplain in the Continental Army (1777–1778), writing patriotic songs like “Columbia.” After his father’s death in 1777, he supported his mother and 12 siblings, marrying Mary Woolsey in 1777, with whom he had eight sons. Dwight’s preaching career blended ministry with education and reform. From 1783 to 1795, he pastored Greenfield Hill Congregational Church in Connecticut, founding a school and writing poetry like The Conquest of Canaan (1785), America’s first epic, and Greenfield Hill (1794). Elected Yale president in 1795 despite opposition from moderates like Ezra Stiles, he preached twice weekly, countering French Revolutionary “infidelity” with sermons sparking the 1802 Yale revival, mentoring figures like Lyman Beecher. His Theology Explained and Defended (1818–1819) and Travels in New England and New York (1821–1822) cemented his influence. A Federalist, he opposed Jeffersonian secularism, advocating a Christian moral order.