Page:The History of the University of Pennsylvania, Wood.djvu/57

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UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA.
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these appointments, it will be perceived that the legislature fully provided for the political fidelity of the University, and its perfect impartiality towards all religious denominations; and these ends were still more firmly secured by the reservation of the right, within six months after the choice of any new trustee, to disapprove and annul the election. Whether the real interest of the institution was consulted by placing it in the hands of men, whose public engagements might be supposed sufficient to occupy their whole attention, was a question which could not be readily answered, and was perhaps considered of secondary importance.

The new trustees met for the first time in December 1779 and having taken the oath or affirmation at that time prescribed by law, organized themselves into a board, and appointed his excellency, Joseph Reed, their president. However dissatisfied with the late decision, the former authorities of the college did not venture to resist the will of the government, and quietly resigned their property to their ap-

    1. The attorney general—Jonathan Dickinson Sergeant.
    The second division consisted of
    1. The senior minister of the Episcopal churches—Rev. Wm. White;
    2. The senior minister of the Presbyterian churches—Rev. John Ewing;
    3. The senior minister of the Lutheran churches—Rev. John Christopher Kunze;
    4. The senior minister of the German Calvinist churches—Rev. Casparus Weiberg;
    5. The senior minister of the Baptist churches —;
    6. The senior minister of the Roman churches—Rev. Ferdinand Farmer.
    The gentlemen composing the third division were Dr. Franklin, then minister at Paris; William Shippen, Frederick Muhlenberg, and James Searle, delegates from Pennsylvania in the congress of the United States; William Augustus Atlee, and John Evans, judges of the supreme court; Timothy Matlack, secretary of the supreme executive council; David Rittenhouse, treasurer of the state; Jonathan Bayard Smith; Samuel Morris; George Bryan; Dr. Thomas Bond; and Dr. James Hutchinson.