LD .8 Ib UC-NRLF sO o Doc. No. 31.] [H. of R. REPORT FROM THE, COMMITTEE APPOINTED AT THE LAST SESSION OF THE LEGISLATURE TO INVESTIGATE THE AFFAIRS OF INDIANA UNIVERSITY. Read, laid on the table, and five hundred copies ordered to be printed To THE HON. SAMUEL JUDAH, Speaker of the House of Representatives: The legislative committee appointed by a resolution of th'e General Assembly, adopted 21st .day of Feb. A. D. 1840, to inquire into the condition of the State University, and the causes of its decline, as also to inquire into the proper means to be adopted to secure its prosperity, and also to inquire into the expediency of establishing an agricul- tural professorship, report as follows to-wit: That a majority of said committed met for the purpose of disc harg 54 386 n g the duties imposed on them by said resolution, at the University Chapel in Bloomington, on the 19th day of May, 1840, and commen- ced the investigations necessary to meet the requisitions of said reso- lution. These efforts of the committee were materially assisted by the action of the board of trustees of said University, who appointed a committee consisting of five gentlemen of their body, to meet the legis- lative committee, and furnish them with such information in their pos- session as might be found useful in the course of the investigation then proposed. This committee consisted of Messrs. Hendricks, Ow- en, West, Hester and Maxwell, and the committee deem it an act of justice to these gentlemen, to state they co-operated efficiently by promptly answering the calls made on them for information by the legislative committee, during the whole of its session.. At the request of the committee of investigation, they were furnished by the commit- tee on behalf of the board of trustees, with a condensed historical ac- count of the institution, -as alao a tabular statement of the funds of the institution. 1 hese documents herewith submitted, (and marked No. 1 & 2) are sufficiently explicit on the subjects of which they treat, and in the opinion of the committee need but little comment. By these docu- ments it appears that the total of the funds of the college, arising from donated lands amounts to $1 17,821 84. In addition to other informa- tion in relation to. the available funds of the University, and the amount of unsold lands belonging to it, these documents contain a val- uable and interesting abstract of the early enactments of the Territory in relation to this institution. Your committee accord fully with the deductions drawn by the committee appointed on behalf of the trus- tees of the University from those enactments, and cannot express too strongly their approbation of the liberal and enlarged views of the thrm Governor, and Legislature (1807) ifl relation to education. Ma- ny of the provisions of those enactments are worthy of imitation at thy confidential letters, be injected into the Legislative counsels? It is an appalling fact that no Literary Institution has" ever yet flourished under legislative management. This Institution, when the undersigned took charge of it, ten years ago, was a mere Grammar School, without a Library, without Apparatus, and with but two Pro- fessors, having a strong tide of prejudice and opposition to stem. In these circumstances, "none t was so poor to do it reverence." It was with difficulty a quorum of the Board could be got together once a year. Yet under all difficulties, it grew; till, in 1837, it numbered one hundred and five students, and a place in its Board of Trustees was thought to be an honor worth all that mighty agitation which the .accuser has, by moving heaven and earth, excited on the subject. Yet the Legislature no sooner began to be moved about it, than it sank at once. And this is now cited, all over the land as another proof that no Literary Institution can prosper, which is even liable to Legislative influence. . Bat, for his part, the undersigned is not yet prepared to give in to, or give up to, this opinion. .He yet believes that this University, though subject to Legislative interference, can be made to prosper. He believes* further, that the Legislative interference, in this very in- stance will prove most salutary. The manner in which this inter- ierence was invoked and all the circumstances connected with it, 400 show who is the person struck at, and why he has been struck at, struck, at, now the third time. You, gentlemen, when you have patiently examined into every alleged cause of complaint, will say whether he is ; guilty, and OP WHAT; and he will remove himself forth- with, from your Institution and from the state which contains it and all will be well will it? Or on the contrary, should your report be favorable will not all be well? There is some doubt. For the ac- cuser, in his letter to Mr. Berry, says he will renew his efforts every year till his object be accomplished: and should he be able to excite another such commotion and tempest, his object will be accomplished. And, gentlemen, should he have this power, the Legislature, with all the resources of the State at their command, cannot save the Univer- sity from prostration and ruin. The undersigned does not feel himself competent to suggest, with any degree of confidence, any preventive, which it is thought, the Legislature would feel themselves authorized to apply. He has heard it suggested, by some honest and good men of great experience, that if any person undertaking to prosecute charges against the State Uni- versity were to render himself liable for the costs of prosecution, in case he failed to establish his charges, it would prevent the recurrence of a case similar to that which has, in this instance, put the State and the University to so much cost and trouble. So far as the prosperity of the institution may depend upon the board of trustees, the undersigned has nothing to propose. The history of all literary institutions goes to establish the principle, that a board of trustees having been appointed by the Legislature, should be left, in all ordinary cases, to manage the trust committed to their hands, unless the interference of the Legislature should be invoked by the Board themselves, acting in their joint and .corporate capacity. In reference to the wants of the state, it has long been the convic- tion of the undersigned that a department of Didactics, such as is sketched in his letters to Mr. Dunning, and such as corresponds in most respects to the Normal Schools of Europe, is greatly needed in the University. It would enable Farmers in moderate circumstances to fit their sons for those positions and occasions, in which the inter- ests and views of that highly' useful and respectable class of the com- munity needto.be represented and 'advocated. . In obedience to the resolution requiring the undersigned to lay be- fore you a brief account of the paternal system of college government, he begs leave to submit to the committee the following brief extract from the annual catalogue for the year 1837 8, page 11, and an ex- tract on the same subject from a discourse delivered before the Legis- lature; and were it not for fear of trespassing too far on the patience of the committee, he would be gratified to submit to their inspection a still more expanded view of the same subject, contained in a discourse delivered before the college of professional teachers, and published in the 5th vol. of their transactions. "The government is paternal, the reason and moral sense of the student are called into exercise by frequent appeals in relation to the 401 matter and- manner of his conduct; and he is thus taught to gov- ern himself. 1 ' This I consider the fundamental principle of the Pater- nal System. It is expanded in the following remarks, extracted from my "Discourse on Education, delivered before the Legislature of the State of Indiana, at the request of the joi nt committee of education, and published in pursuance of a vote of the House of Representatives Jan. 17, 1830." They are found on pages 20 and 21. "In the re- marks which I have to offer, as to the methods proper to be adopted for the purpose of guarding against the formation of evil habits, I can not be particular. I may be allowed to specify one thing which, if I am not utterly mistaken, has had a most pernicious influence, and must have, whenever it is adopted. I allude to the practice of governing students by a multiplicity of written laws, supported as they must be, by a system of espionage. The laws of a state differ essentially from those of a school. The former have for their object the protection of individ- uals 'in their just rights: that of the latter is the formation of charac- ter. Young men should be formed in character and habit, so as not merely to shun vice, and to practice virtue, but to love the latter and detest' the former. And this is what mere law and authority can not do. No one becomes good by constraint. Besides, laws often pro- voke to their own violation. A generous youth does not like to be commanded to do what he knows he ought to do, and would do if left to himself. What he does by constraint, or under the appearance of constraint, he loses the credit of doing, further; the formation of char- acter contemplates, a thousand things, which change their nature, if enforced by authority. If you go about to make people religious by compulsion, you make them hoypocrites. Who- would think of teach- ing politeness by rules and penalties? Further still; if you lay down a law, it must be invariable. But the dispositions of the young are different, and demand a different treatment. Yet again: watch a boy, and you do him an injury: you treat him as a slave; and such treatment will gradually generate a base and servile spirit, which will need to be watched. Too much government is always injurious, a maxim which rulers are sure to learn. There is but one law fn heaven, - the law "of love; and the Author of .our salvation has proposed no other for the government of those whom He is forming for an eternal resi- dence in that happy place. The society of a college ought to be a family in which the faculty is the parent and the pupils the children of different tempers and attainments, and therefore to be treated dif- ferently, but all under the same kind and paternal government. And those who cannot be governed in this way, 'it would be wrong to ed- ucate, 'if it were possible/' It will be observed from these extracts thaUh.e } Paternal System stands opposed not to all laws whatever, but only to such "a multiplicity" of them as would, in carrying them into effect, render necessary a system of espionage^ For instance, in some Institutions, letters sent home by the pupils must first be inspected by the Faculty. Let each professor be strict in requiring the performance of the duties of the recitation room, and he will soon find out who do not behave well out of it. And, 56 402 let such, after sufficient trial, be dismissed, that they may, before the season of youth be past, be set to some other employment, in which they may *be useful in future life, to themselves and others. All which is respectfully submitted, A W Y -Ll-liu Bloomington Sept. -25th 1840. 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