Jason Whitman to Thomas Wilson Dorr an Electronic Transcription

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                    <persName ref="#thomas_wilson_dorr">
                        <forename type="first">Thomas</forename>
                        <forename type="middle">Wilson</forename>
                        <surname>Dorr</surname></persName>: an Electronic Transcription</title>
                <title type="sub">
                    The 
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                        <forename type="first">Thomas</forename>
                        <forename type="middle">Wilson</forename>
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                    Letters Project
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                    Jason Whitman to TWD
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                <pubPlace>Providence, Rhode Island</pubPlace>
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                        <forename type="first">Thomas</forename>
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                        <surname>Dorr</surname>
                    </persName>
                    Letters Project
                </title>
                <editor>Letters selected, edited, and transcribed from the original manuscripts by
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                        <roleName>Dr.</roleName>
                        <forename>Erik J.</forename>
                        <surname>Chaput</surname>
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                        <forename>Russell</forename>
                        <surname>DeSimone</surname>
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                        <forename type="first">Thomas</forename>
                        <forename type="middle">Wilson</forename>
                        <surname>Dorr</surname>
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                    <date when="1821-06-24">24 June 1821</date>.  
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                        <forename type="first">Sidney</forename> 
                        <forename type="middle">Smith</forename> 
                        <surname>Rider</surname>
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                        <forename type="first">Thomas</forename>
                        <forename type="middle">Wilson</forename>
                        <surname>Dorr</surname>
                    </persName>
                    Letters Project includes digital transcriptions of thirty letters from the Dorr
                    Correspondence files in the 
                    <persName ref="#sidney_s_smith">
                        <forename>Sidney S.</forename>
                        <forename> Rider </forename>
                    </persName> 
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                    <persName ref="#james_f_simmons">
                        <forename type="first">James</forename>
                        <forename type="middle">Fowler</forename>
                        <surname>Simmons</surname>
                    </persName>                        
                    Papers at the <orgName ref="#loc">Library of Congress</orgName>, the <orgName ref="#gli">Gilder Lehman Institute</orgName>, 
                    and one letter from the private collection of 
                    <persName ref="#richard_slaney">Richard Slaney</persName>. 
                    The goal of the project is to further the digital exploration of 
                    <placeName ref="#ri">Rhode Island</placeName> 
                    History through the combination of traditional scholarly editing with cutting edge digital
                    technologies. These letters illustrate aspects of race, reform, antislavery and
                    proslavery politics, and, of course, the <name>Dorr Rebellion</name>. The
                    selection of letters was governed by the notion of what would work best in the
                    high school and college classroom, especially in terms of length and
                    readability. 
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                    <persName ref="#erik_j_chaput">
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                    <orgName ref="#rich">Rhode Island Council for the Humanities</orgName>. </p>
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                    <persName ref="#thomas_wilson_dorr">
                        <forename type="first">Thomas</forename>
                        <forename type="middle">Wilson</forename>
                        <surname>Dorr</surname>
                    </persName>.
                    In order to keep the number of letters selected for this project to a manageable
                    number the editors focused on 
                    <persName ref="#thomas_wilson_dorr">
                        <surname>Dorr</surname>’s
                    </persName> 
                    early life (<orgName ref="#phillips_exeter">Phillips Exeter Academy</orgName> and <orgName ref="#harvard">Harvard University</orgName>), 
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            <titlePage>
                <titlePart type="main">The Dorr Letters Project</titlePart>
                <titlePart type="subtitle">Jason Whitman to Thomas Wilson Dorr:<lb />Electronic Transcription</titlePart>
            </titlePage>
            
            <div type="introduction" xml:id="intro" org="uniform" part="N" sample="complete"><head><title>Introduction</title></head>
                <p>
                    <persName><forename type="first">Jason</forename> <surname>Whitman</surname></persName>, a close friend of the <persName><surname>Dorr</surname></persName> family, was from <placeName ref="#nh">New Hampshire</placeName> 
                    and was a student at <orgName ref="#phillips_exeter">Phillips Exeter Academy</orgName> at the time <persName ref="#thomas_wilson_dorr"><forename>Thomas</forename> <surname>Dorr</surname></persName> was a student there. 
                    This letter was written when <persName ref="#allen_dorr"><forename>Allen</forename> <surname>Dorr</surname></persName> (<date from="1808" to="1889">1808-1889</date>), the younger brother 
                    of <persName ref="#thomas_wilson_dorr"><forename>Thomas</forename> <surname>Dorr</surname></persName>, was enrolled at <orgName ref="#phillips_exeter">Exeter</orgName> and while  <persName><forename>Jason</forename> <surname>Whitman</surname></persName>
                    was still in attendance. In the <date notBefore="1800" notAfter="1850">early 19th century</date>, <orgName ref="#phillips_exeter">Exeter</orgName> was a feeding school for <orgName ref="#harvard">Harvard College</orgName>.
                </p>
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            <div type="letter" xml:id="letter" org="uniform" part="N" sample="complete"><head><title>Letter</title></head>
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                <opener>
                    <dateline>
                        <lb/><placeName ref="#phillips_exeter">Exeter</placeName>
                        <date when="1821-06-24">June 24, 1821</date>
                    </dateline>
                    
                <lb/><salute>Friend <persName ref="#thomas_wilson_dorr"><surname>Dorr</surname></persName>,</salute>
                </opener>
                
                <p>Among friends <sic>apologys</sic> are 
                <lb/>useless. They can overlook trivial offenses. But 
                <lb/>am I not arrogating too much to myself, to think 
                <lb/><del rend="overstrike"><gap atLeast="4" atMost="5" unit="chars" reason="illegible" /></del>that my letters can be any thing but im-
                <lb/>pertinent intrusions upon your more impor-
                <lb/>tant avocations? If you look for news I fear you 
                <lb/>will be disappointed, for <orgName ref="#phillips_exeter">Exeter</orgName> is the same old place 
                <lb/>&amp; <del rend="overstrike">ar</del><del rend="overstrike">ar</del> our daily routine of duties is <metamark place="bottom">&#x02C6;</metamark><add place="above">the same</add> it has been 
                <lb/>for years past, true we, once in a while, take 
                <lb/>a <del rend="overstrike"><gap extent="2" unit="chars" reason="illegible" /></del>new book, but they are all such as you are 
                <lb/>familiar with, &amp; consequently how interesting so ever 
                <lb/>they may be to us, nothing I can say of them 
                <lb/>will be interesting to you. These scenes are soon 
                <lb/>to be changed for the untried, but I suspect 
                <lb/>less tranquil <del rend="overstrike"><gap/></del> ones of college life.
                </p>
                
                <p>                    
                <lb/>How we shall be able to pass that day, which 
                <lb/><emph rend="underline">tries boys souls</emph>, as well as determines their mer-
                <lb/>its &amp; proficiency in classical lore <metamark place="bottom">&#x02C6;</metamark><add place="above">I know not</add>. But if after 
                <lb/><persName><surname>Fowely</surname></persName>, <persName><surname>Elwyn</surname></persName>, &amp; <persName><surname>Gourges</surname></persName> have gone through 
                <lb/>it with success, we should fail who have 
                <lb/>exerted ourselves to the utmost to prepare 
                <lb/>for it, it would be a pity. My pecuniary 
                <lb/>circumstances are such that my getting an educa-
                  
                <pb n="2" facs="/xtf/data/tei/bookreader/letter2/#page/2" />
                    
                <lb/>tion will depend upon my own exertions, &amp; I <del rend="overstrike"><gap/></del>  
                <lb/>understand that the most effectual method 
                <lb/>of obtaining assistance, is to endeavor to ex-
                <lb/>cel in my studies. This I am confident can 
                <lb/>be done <metamark place="bottom">&#x02C6;</metamark><add place="above">only</add> by diligent &amp; preserving industry. 
                <lb/>For although I have advocated <del rend="overstrike">they</del> the side of 
                <lb/>genius, yet it will not do in practice 
                <lb/>&amp; I find, I can say from experience, that 
                <lb/>any one who does in reality excel, must do 
                <lb/>it by application. I was very sorry to 
                <lb/><del><gap/></del>hear that your classmate <persName><surname>Sturges</surname></persName> was 
                <lb/>suspended. I hope however it will do him 
                <lb/>good, though from what <persName><surname>Prentiss</surname></persName> says of 
                <lb/>his native <del><gap extent="4" unit="chars" reason="illegible"/></del>town, I should think it 
                <lb/>not a very good place for studying. 
                <lb/>The college punishments although in-
                <lb/>tended, like the <name>Penitentiary of the Leaguers</name>, 
                <lb/>to have a corrective influence on 
                <lb/>the character of the scholars, yet it often 
                <lb/>happens the reverse. This proceeds per-
                <lb/>haps from the <del><gap atLeast="4" atMost="5" unit="chars" reason="illegible"/></del> government's not selecting the most proper place to 
                <lb/>send them. I hope this will not be the case with <persName><surname>Sturges</surname></persName>. I spent the 
                <lb/>greater part of two days at <placeName ref="#cambridge_ma">Cambridge</placeName> 
                <lb/>with <persName><surname>Smith</surname></persName> and <persName><surname>Davis</surname></persName>. I was very much 
                <lb/>disgusted with the appearance of many 
                    
                <pb n="3" facs="/xtf/data/tei/bookreader/letter2/#page/3" /> 
                    
                <lb/>of the freshmen, mostly Southerners, whom 
                <lb/>I saw at <persName><surname>Smith</surname></persName>’s room. I did expect, 
                <lb/>that young gentlemen who were devoting 
                <lb/>their time at least, if not their atten-
                <lb/>tion to <sic>litterary</sic> pursuits, would when 
                <lb/>they met together converse like reason-
                <lb/>able beings, if not like <sic>litterary</sic> char-
                <lb/>acters. But I was greatly disappointed. 
                <lb/>The conversation I heard was such as <del><gap/></del>
                <lb/>would be a disgrace to persons in the 
                <lb/>lowest condition of life. I find that 
                <lb/><persName><surname>Davis</surname></persName> is rightly called a "Jack Ass;" for 
                <lb/>like that <del>he</del> animal, he is continu-
                <lb/>ally braying without any sense in <damage agent="tear"><unclear>what</unclear></damage>
                <lb/>he says. Your Brother is still 
                <lb/>very studious. How he recites I know 
                <lb/>not; since I study out &amp; consequent-
                <lb/>ly hear none of the classes when they 
                <lb/>recite. But I must conclude. 
                </p>
                
                <closer>
                    <lb/><salute>Believe me to be your unworthy friend, </salute>
                    <lb/><signed><persName><forename>Jason</forename> <surname>Whitman</surname></persName></signed>
                    <lb/>Master <persName ref="#thomas_wilson_dorr"><forename type="first" full="abb">Tho’s</forename> <forename type="middle" full="abb">W.</forename> <surname>Dorr</surname></persName>
                </closer>
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        </body>
        <back>
        <div type="questions" xml:id="questions" org="uniform" part="N" sample="complete"><head><title>Questions</title></head>
            <p>
                What do you think <persName><surname>Whitman</surname></persName>’s opinion is of student life at <orgName ref="#harvard">Harvard College</orgName>?  
            </p>        
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Jason Whitman to Thomas Wilson Dorr : an Electronic Transcription The Thomas Wilson Dorr Letters Project Jason Whitman to TWD Jason Whitman Encoded by Christiane Marie Landry Providence College Digital Publishing Services Phillips Memorial Library
Box 1841 Providence College, Phillips Memorial Library 1 Cunningham Square Providence, RI 02918 USA url:mailto:dps@providence.edu url:http://www.providence.edu/LIBRARY/dps/Pages/default.aspx 401-865-1517
Providence, Rhode Island 2012 This electronic transcription is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
The Thomas Wilson Dorr Letters Project Letters selected, edited, and transcribed from the original manuscripts by Dr. Erik J. Chaput and Russell DeSimone with the assistance of Dr. Edward E. Andrews Jason Whitman to Thomas Wilson Dorr , 24 June 1821. Sidney Smith Rider Collection, John Hay Library Brown University John Hay Library, Brown University The Road to Rebellion

A three-page manuscript letter. Envelope on recto of page three. Writing on recto and verso.

June 24, 1821

The Thomas Wilson Dorr Letters Project includes digital transcriptions of thirty letters from the Dorr Correspondence files in the Sidney S. Rider Collection at the John Hay Library (Brown University), the James Fowler Simmons Papers at the Library of Congress, the Gilder Lehman Institute, and one letter from the private collection of Richard Slaney. The goal of the project is to further the digital exploration of Rhode Island History through the combination of traditional scholarly editing with cutting edge digital technologies. These letters illustrate aspects of race, reform, antislavery and proslavery politics, and, of course, the Dorr Rebellion. The selection of letters was governed by the notion of what would work best in the high school and college classroom, especially in terms of length and readability. The head editors ( DeSimone and Chaput ) also selected letters that had previously not been cited by historians of the Dorr Rebellion. The project was funded in part by a grant from the Rhode Island Council for the Humanities.

There are more than 2500 hundred letters that are known to exist that either pertain to the Dorr Rebellion and its aftermath or the early life of the rebellion’s leader Thomas Wilson Dorr . In order to keep the number of letters selected for this project to a manageable number the editors focused on Dorr’s early life (Phillips Exeter Academy and Harvard University), his early law career, his political career in the mid-1830s, and his emergence as the leader of the reform movement that sought to revise Rhode Island's archaic governing structure.

The Dorr Letters Project Jason Whitman to Thomas Wilson Dorr:Electronic Transcription
Introduction

Jason Whitman , a close friend of the Dorr family, was from New Hampshire and was a student at Phillips Exeter Academy at the time Thomas Dorr was a student there. This letter was written when Allen Dorr (1808-1889), the younger brother of Thomas Dorr , was enrolled at Exeter and while Jason Whitman was still in attendance. In the early 19th century, Exeter was a feeding school for Harvard College.

Letter view page image(s) Exeter June 24, 1821 Friend Dorr ,

Among friends apologys are useless. They can overlook trivial offenses. But am I not arrogating too much to myself, to think that my letters can be any thing but im- pertinent intrusions upon your more impor- tant avocations? If you look for news I fear you will be disappointed, for Exeter is the same old place & arar our daily routine of duties is ˆ the same it has been for years past, true we, once in a while, take a new book, but they are all such as you are familiar with, & consequently how interesting so ever they may be to us, nothing I can say of them will be interesting to you. These scenes are soon to be changed for the untried, but I suspect less tranquil ones of college life.

How we shall be able to pass that day, which tries boys souls, as well as determines their mer- its & proficiency in classical lore ˆ I know not. But if after Fowely , Elwyn , & Gourges have gone through it with success, we should fail who have exerted ourselves to the utmost to prepare for it, it would be a pity. My pecuniary circumstances are such that my getting an educa- view page image(s) tion will depend upon my own exertions, & I understand that the most effectual method of obtaining assistance, is to endeavor to ex- cel in my studies. This I am confident can be done ˆ only by diligent & preserving industry. For although I have advocated they the side of genius, yet it will not do in practice & I find, I can say from experience, that any one who does in reality excel, must do it by application. I was very sorry to hear that your classmate Sturges was suspended. I hope however it will do him good, though from what Prentiss says of his native town, I should think it not a very good place for studying. The college punishments although in- tended, like the Penitentiary of the Leaguers, to have a corrective influence on the character of the scholars, yet it often happens the reverse. This proceeds per- haps from the government's not selecting the most proper place to send them. I hope this will not be the case with Sturges . I spent the greater part of two days at Cambridge with Smith and Davis . I was very much disgusted with the appearance of many view page image(s) of the freshmen, mostly Southerners, whom I saw at Smith ’s room. I did expect, that young gentlemen who were devoting their time at least, if not their atten- tion to litterary pursuits, would when they met together converse like reason- able beings, if not like litterary char- acters. But I was greatly disappointed. The conversation I heard was such as would be a disgrace to persons in the lowest condition of life. I find that Davis is rightly called a "Jack Ass;" for like that he animal, he is continu- ally braying without any sense in what he says. Your Brother is still very studious. How he recites I know not; since I study out & consequent- ly hear none of the classes when they recite. But I must conclude.

Believe me to be your unworthy friend, Jason Whitman Master Tho’s W. Dorr
Questions

What do you think Whitman ’s opinion is of student life at Harvard College?

Toolbox

Themes:

Jason Whitman to Thomas Wilson Dorr : an Electronic Transcription The Thomas Wilson Dorr Letters Project Jason Whitman to TWD Jason Whitman Encoded by Christiane Marie Landry Providence College Digital Publishing Services Phillips Memorial Library
Box 1841 Providence College, Phillips Memorial Library 1 Cunningham Square Providence, RI 02918 USA url:mailto:dps@providence.edu url:http://www.providence.edu/LIBRARY/dps/Pages/default.aspx 401-865-1517
Providence, Rhode Island 2012 This electronic transcription is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
The Thomas Wilson Dorr Letters Project Letters selected, edited, and transcribed from the original manuscripts by Dr. Erik J. Chaput and Russell DeSimone with the assistance of Dr. Edward E. Andrews Jason Whitman to Thomas Wilson Dorr , 24 June 1821. Sidney Smith Rider Collection, John Hay Library Brown University John Hay Library, Brown University The Road to Rebellion

A three-page manuscript letter. Envelope on recto of page three. Writing on recto and verso.

June 24, 1821

The Thomas Wilson Dorr Letters Project includes digital transcriptions of thirty letters from the Dorr Correspondence files in the Sidney S. Rider Collection at the John Hay Library (Brown University), the James Fowler Simmons Papers at the Library of Congress, the Gilder Lehman Institute, and one letter from the private collection of Richard Slaney. The goal of the project is to further the digital exploration of Rhode Island History through the combination of traditional scholarly editing with cutting edge digital technologies. These letters illustrate aspects of race, reform, antislavery and proslavery politics, and, of course, the Dorr Rebellion. The selection of letters was governed by the notion of what would work best in the high school and college classroom, especially in terms of length and readability. The head editors ( DeSimone and Chaput ) also selected letters that had previously not been cited by historians of the Dorr Rebellion. The project was funded in part by a grant from the Rhode Island Council for the Humanities.

There are more than 2500 hundred letters that are known to exist that either pertain to the Dorr Rebellion and its aftermath or the early life of the rebellion’s leader Thomas Wilson Dorr . In order to keep the number of letters selected for this project to a manageable number the editors focused on Dorr’s early life (Phillips Exeter Academy and Harvard University), his early law career, his political career in the mid-1830s, and his emergence as the leader of the reform movement that sought to revise Rhode Island's archaic governing structure.

The Dorr Letters Project Jason Whitman to Thomas Wilson Dorr:Electronic Transcription
Introduction

Jason Whitman , a close friend of the Dorr family, was from New Hampshire and was a student at Phillips Exeter Academy at the time Thomas Dorr was a student there. This letter was written when Allen Dorr (1808-1889), the younger brother of Thomas Dorr , was enrolled at Exeter and while Jason Whitman was still in attendance. In the early 19th century, Exeter was a feeding school for Harvard College.

Letter Exeter June 24, 1821 Friend Dorr ,

Among friends apologys are useless. They can overlook trivial offenses. But am I not arrogating too much to myself, to think that my letters can be any thing but im- pertinent intrusions upon your more impor- tant avocations? If you look for news I fear you will be disappointed, for Exeter is the same old place & arar our daily routine of duties is ˆ the same it has been for years past, true we, once in a while, take a new book, but they are all such as you are familiar with, & consequently how interesting so ever they may be to us, nothing I can say of them will be interesting to you. These scenes are soon to be changed for the untried, but I suspect less tranquil ones of college life.

How we shall be able to pass that day, which tries boys souls, as well as determines their mer- its & proficiency in classical lore ˆ I know not. But if after Fowely , Elwyn , & Gourges have gone through it with success, we should fail who have exerted ourselves to the utmost to prepare for it, it would be a pity. My pecuniary circumstances are such that my getting an educa- tion will depend upon my own exertions, & I understand that the most effectual method of obtaining assistance, is to endeavor to ex- cel in my studies. This I am confident can be done ˆ only by diligent & preserving industry. For although I have advocated they the side of genius, yet it will not do in practice & I find, I can say from experience, that any one who does in reality excel, must do it by application. I was very sorry to hear that your classmate Sturges was suspended. I hope however it will do him good, though from what Prentiss says of his native town, I should think it not a very good place for studying. The college punishments although in- tended, like the Penitentiary of the Leaguers, to have a corrective influence on the character of the scholars, yet it often happens the reverse. This proceeds per- haps from the government's not selecting the most proper place to send them. I hope this will not be the case with Sturges . I spent the greater part of two days at Cambridge with Smith and Davis . I was very much disgusted with the appearance of many of the freshmen, mostly Southerners, whom I saw at Smith ’s room. I did expect, that young gentlemen who were devoting their time at least, if not their atten- tion to litterary pursuits, would when they met together converse like reason- able beings, if not like litterary char- acters. But I was greatly disappointed. The conversation I heard was such as would be a disgrace to persons in the lowest condition of life. I find that Davis is rightly called a "Jack Ass;" for like that he animal, he is continu- ally braying without any sense in what he says. Your Brother is still very studious. How he recites I know not; since I study out & consequent- ly hear none of the classes when they recite. But I must conclude.

Believe me to be your unworthy friend, Jason Whitman Master Tho’s W. Dorr
Questions

What do you think Whitman ’s opinion is of student life at Harvard College?