Sunday 11 December 2011

Theophilus Grew, First Math Prof at Univ of Penn


December 17, 1750 - Mr. Theophilus Grew appointed first Master in Mathematics at Academy of Philidelphia (to become the Univ of Pennsylvania). Grew published the first American Trigonometry book while there, “The Description and Use of the Globes..” His 1752 Barbados almanack, for the year of our Lord 1752, being bissextile, or leap-year. / By Theophilus Grew, professor of the mathematics was published in 1751 and printed by Ben Franklin. "This is the only recorded sheet almanac extant from the Franklin shop and the only one prepared by Grew which Franklin and Hall are known to have printed."--*C. W. Miller, Franklin
No documentation survives of Theophilus Grew's birth, education and early life. He first appears in the historical record in the early 1730s, when he had the astronomical skills to calculate and prepare almanacs, probably in Maryland. His first known almanac, The Maryland Almanack for the Year...1733, was published in Annapolis in 1732. Later his almanacs were published in Philadelphia, New York and Willliamsburg.
The earliest extant newspaper advertisement identifying Grew as a schoolteacher appeared in Philadelphia in 1734. In his Philadelphia school he taught mathematical subjects, including basic arithmetic as well as such academic and practical applications as surveying, navigation, astronomy, accounting and the use of globes. After serving as a headmaster in Chestertown, Kent County, Maryland, from 1740 to 1742, he reopened his school in Philadelphia. This school for boys, located first on Walnut Street and then in 1744 in Norris Alley, included English, but emphasized mathematics. It also included a night school offering mathematics for gentlemen. In 1739 Franklin's nephew James Franklin, Jr., and his son William Franklin had been studying with Theophilus Grew, but on 12 December, they became students of Alexander Annand.
A friend of Benjamin Franklin, Grew was one of Penn's earliest faculty members. He was appointed master of mathematics at the Academy of Philadelphia (origin of the University of Pennsylvania) in 1750. When the College charter was obtained in 1755, he was elected the college's first professor of mathematics. He was mathematics professor for Penn's first graduates, the Class of 1757. In 1753, the trustees gave Grew permission to conduct a private evening school as well. The curriculum of one of Grew's courses is revealed in a notebook kept by John Yeates Jr. while a student at the Academy in 1753; the notebook is entitled “An Introduction to the Mathematics: Containing Compends of Arithmetic, Geometry and plain Trigonometry, The different Kinds of Sailing, with The common Method of keeping a Journal at Sea.”
Besides his teaching, Grew also in 1749 published a description of an approaching eclipse of the sun, and the following year served as one of the commissioners from Pennsylvania establishing the boundary between Pennsylvania and Maryland. Grew's most important publication was his student text, The Description and Use of the Globes, Celestial and Terrestial; with Variety of Examples for the Learner's Exercise (a copy of which was presented to the University Library in 1905). This 1753 book was the first textbook by a member of the Penn faculty as well as first student text on the use of globes to be published in the American colonies. For his contributions to knowledge, he was awarded the honorary Master of Arts degree at the 1757 commencement. Grew entered his son Theophilus in the Academy in 1751. He served as Penn's mathematics professor until his death from consumption in 1759. He is buried in The Christschurch Burial Ground with many notables including Ben Franklin, and five other signers of the Declaration of Independence. *archives.upenn.edu

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