On This Day In History: Noah Webster, Jr. “Father Of American Scholarship And Education” Was Born – On Oct 16, 1758

AncientPages.com - On October 16, 1758, Noah Webster, Jr. "Father of American Scholarship and Education," was born.

He was an American lexicographer, textbook pioneer, English-language spelling reformer, political writer, editor, and prolific author.

Webster's name is linked with the word  "dictionary" in the United States, especially the modern Merriam-Webster dictionary that was first published in 1828 as An American Dictionary of the English Language.

Noah Webster

Noah Webster was born on October 16, 1758, in the West Division of Hartford, Connecticut (now West Hartford). He grew up in an average colonial family - his father farmed and worked as a weaver while his mother worked at home.

At the time, few people went to college, but Webster enjoyed learning so much that his parents sent him to Yale, Connecticut's first college. He left for New Haven in 1774 when he was 16 and graduated in 1778. Webster wanted to continue his education by studying law, but his parents could not afford to give him more money for school. After thinking about his options, Webster began working as a teacher.

Soon he realized that the American education system needed to be updated. Children of all ages were crammed into one-room schoolhouses with no desks, poor books, and untrained teachers. Their books came from England, but he wanted to change this, so, in 1783, he wrote his textbook: A Grammatical Institute of the English Language. It earned its nickname, the "Blue-Backed Speller," because of its characteristic blue cover. For over 100 years, Webster's book taught children to read, spell and pronounce words. It was the most famous American book of its time, selling nearly 100 million copies.

Noah Webster

In 1801, Webster started working on defining the words that Americans use. He did this because Americans spoke and used words differently than English, and to help people who lived in different parts of the country to speak and spell the same way.

He added American words that weren't in English dictionaries and American spellings instead of English ones.

His first edition, A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language, was published in 1806. This book offered brief definitions of about 37,000 words. It took him 22 more years to finish his American Dictionary of the English Language. When he finished in 1828, at 70, Noah's dictionary defined over 65,000 words.

Noah Webster accomplished many things in his life. Not only did he fight for an American language, he also fought for copyright laws, a strong federal government, universal education, and the abolition of slavery. In between fighting for these causes, he wrote textbooks, edited magazines, corresponded with men like George Washington and Benjamin Franklin, helped found Amherst College, created his version of an "American" Bible, raised eight children, and celebrated 54 anniversaries with his beloved wife.

When Noah Webster died on May 28, 1843, he was an American hero.

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References:

Noah Webster House