#2190 – 1986 56¢ Great Americans: John Harvard

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U.S. #2190
56¢ John Harvard
Great Americans Series

Issue Date: September 3, 1986
City: Boston, MA
Quantity: 53,150,000
Printed By: Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Printing Method:
Engraved
Perforations:
11
Color: Scarlet
 

Death Of John Harvard 

Clergyman John Harvard died on September 14, 1638, in Charlestown, Massachusetts Bay Colony.

Harvard was born on November 26, 1607, in Southward, Surrey, England. He was the fourth of nine children and his grandfather was reportedly an associate of Shakespeare’s father.

The bubonic plague later claimed the lives of most of Harvard’s family, leaving just him, a brother, and his mother. Harvard went on to attend Emmanuel College where he earned a B.A. and M.A. and was eventually ordained a dissenting minister. Harvard was married in 1636, and the following year moved with his wife to New England.

The Harvards settled in Charlestown, the oldest neighborhood in Boston, Massachusetts, and Harvard became a teaching elder of the First Church and an assistant preacher. Also while in Charleston, Harvard was made part of a committee “to consider of some things tending toward a body of laws.” He had a home with 120 acres that he intended to use to raise cattle.

However, Harvard would not get a chance to carry out this plan. He died of consumption, now known as tuberculosis, on September 14, 1638.

Two years before Harvard died, the Massachusetts Bay Colony established a college in what was then called Newtowne (later Cambridge) to “advance learning and perpetuate it to posterity.” Over his lifetime, Harvard had inherited a significant amount of money following the deaths of his parents and brother. Having no children, he told his wife on his deathbed that he wished to donate half of his estate (£780 – worth over $590,000 in today’s currency‍) to the young school, and she would receive the other half. Harvard also bequeathed his 400-volume library to the school. Unfortunately, all but one of these books was destroyed in a fire in 1764.

In recognition of Harvard’s significant contribution to the school, it was renamed in his honor in 1639.

Click here for more about Harvard University.

Read More - Click Here


 

U.S. #2190
56¢ John Harvard
Great Americans Series

Issue Date: September 3, 1986
City: Boston, MA
Quantity: 53,150,000
Printed By: Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Printing Method:
Engraved
Perforations:
11
Color: Scarlet
 

Death Of John Harvard 

Clergyman John Harvard died on September 14, 1638, in Charlestown, Massachusetts Bay Colony.

Harvard was born on November 26, 1607, in Southward, Surrey, England. He was the fourth of nine children and his grandfather was reportedly an associate of Shakespeare’s father.

The bubonic plague later claimed the lives of most of Harvard’s family, leaving just him, a brother, and his mother. Harvard went on to attend Emmanuel College where he earned a B.A. and M.A. and was eventually ordained a dissenting minister. Harvard was married in 1636, and the following year moved with his wife to New England.

The Harvards settled in Charlestown, the oldest neighborhood in Boston, Massachusetts, and Harvard became a teaching elder of the First Church and an assistant preacher. Also while in Charleston, Harvard was made part of a committee “to consider of some things tending toward a body of laws.” He had a home with 120 acres that he intended to use to raise cattle.

However, Harvard would not get a chance to carry out this plan. He died of consumption, now known as tuberculosis, on September 14, 1638.

Two years before Harvard died, the Massachusetts Bay Colony established a college in what was then called Newtowne (later Cambridge) to “advance learning and perpetuate it to posterity.” Over his lifetime, Harvard had inherited a significant amount of money following the deaths of his parents and brother. Having no children, he told his wife on his deathbed that he wished to donate half of his estate (£780 – worth over $590,000 in today’s currency‍) to the young school, and she would receive the other half. Harvard also bequeathed his 400-volume library to the school. Unfortunately, all but one of these books was destroyed in a fire in 1764.

In recognition of Harvard’s significant contribution to the school, it was renamed in his honor in 1639.

Click here for more about Harvard University.