The Encyclopedia Americana (1920)/Ogden, Robert Curtis
OGDEN, Robert Curtis, American
merchant and philanthropist: b. Philadelphia, Pa.,
20 June 1836; d. 1913. From 1885 he was a
retail merchant, a member of the John
Wanamaker firm. He is best known by his work in
behalf of the cause of education in the South.
He was president of the board of trustees of
Hampton Institute, a trustee of Tuskegee
Institute and president of the Southern
Educational Board and the Conference for Education
in the South. His efforts were directed chiefly
toward providing education for both negroes
and illiterate whites through Southern agencies
and in friendly co-operation between Northerners
and Southerners. In 1903 Tulane
University gave him the degree of LL.D. in
recognition of his services, and Union College and
Yale University accorded him like recognition.
He published ‘Samuel Chapman Armstrong,’
the Founder's Day address at Hampton
Institute (1894); ‘Pew Rents and the New Testament’
(1892)’; ‘Sunday School Teaching’
(1894).