Theodore Sedgwick Gold
T. S. Gold | |
---|---|
Secretary of the State of Connecticut Board of Agriculture | |
In office 1866–1901 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Madison, New York, US | March 2, 1818
Died | March 20, 1906 West Cornwall, Connecticut | (aged 88)
Political party | Republican Party (USA) |
Alma mater | Yale University |
Occupation | Public official, agricultural educator, farmer |
Theodore Sedgwick Gold, commonly referred to by his initials as T. S. Gold (March 2, 1818 — March 20, 1906), was an American farmer and schoolteacher who served as Secretary of the State of Connecticut Board of Agriculture (1866–1901) and trustee of the Connecticut Agricultural College from its founding in 1881 through 1901. He played a vital role in establishing the college and fostering agriculture in the state.[1]
Early life and education
[edit]Gold was born in Madison, New York, on March 2, 1818. He was a son of Dr. Samuel Wadsworth Gold and Phebe (Cleveland) Gold. His family moved to Cornwall, Connecticut, that same year, returning to his father's ancestral farm. In 1824, the family moved to Goshen, where the doctor practiced medicine for fifteen years before returning to Cornwall to cultivate the family farm.[2] Gold attended local public schools and Goshen Academy.[1]
Like his father and grandfather before him, Gold attended Yale University, graduating with his bachelor's degree in 1838. He spent the following three years teaching in Goshen and Waterbury academies while pursuing graduate coursework in medicine, botany, and mineralogy at Yale.[1]
Career
[edit]Gold believed that agricultural education was key to improving the quantity and quality of crops for Connecticut's struggling farmers. In 1845, Gold and his father founded the Cream Hill Agricultural School on their family farm. The school remained in operation until Samuel Gold's death in 1869. The all-boys school never had more than 24 students at a time, but it graduated a total of 272, some as far afield as Louisiana, Michigan, Germany, and Peru. Gold and his father were the only full-time instructors, teaching subjects from practical farming and military drill to foreign languages and piano.[3]
Gold was a charter member of the Connecticut State Agricultural Society in 1852. He and his wife were charter members of the Cornwall Grange and held most meetings in their home. Gold edited The Homestead, an agricultural paper, from 1856 to 1861. In 1864, he obtained from the Connecticut General Assembly a charter for the Connecticut Soldiers' Orphans' Home in Mansfield. He served as secretary of the corporation until 1874.[2]
In August 1866, Gold was appointed Secretary of the Connecticut Board of Agriculture, established by the General Assembly earlier that year. After his father's death and Cream Hill's closure in 1869, Gold devoted himself to the work of the board. Initially formed as a clearinghouse for the state's farmers, Gold's leadership ensured its reconstitution in 1871 as an administrative and regulatory agency, with the power to quarantine diseased animals, appoint state officials, and shape policy.[1] Gold convinced the legislature to establish the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station (the nation's first state-sponsored agricultural experiment station) in 1875. He served as secretary of the station's board of control for many years.[2]
Gold was a major influence in arranging for the state to charter the Storrs Agricultural School in 1881. The school became Connecticut's land-grant college, taking away the title and Morrill Act subsidy from Yale. Gold served as trustee of the future University of Connecticut from 1881 to 1901 and exerted a powerful influence on its development. He wrote the trustees' annual reports and continually lobbied the General Assembly for increased funding. The college named its first dormitory Gold Hall in his honor (the building burned down in 1914).[4] The college was the culmination of Gold's use of "progressive means such as education, scientific methods and state organization to preserve the traditional values and social position of the Connecticut farmer."[1]
In addition to his state-wide activities, Gold was an active citizen of Cornwall. Although he never sought elected office, he was appointed to many town committees, taking a special interest in fiscal affairs and education. He served as deacon of the North Cornwall Congregational Church for many years. "To him," remarked one historian, "the pillars of society were family, farm, and church."[1]
Later in life, Gold became a committed conservationist. He served as the first vice president of the Connecticut Forestry Association, formed in 1895 to “develop public appreciation of the value of forests and the need for preserving and using them rightly.” Gold's son, Charles Lockwood Gold, also a Yale graduate and farmer, served as the association's vice president in the 1920s.[5]
Gold retired as secretary of the Board of Agriculture and trustee of the Connecticut Agricultural College in 1901, at the age of 83. In retirement, he continued to give speeches, publish essays, and edit the Handbook of Connecticut Agriculture and the Descriptive Catalogue of Farms in Connecticut for Sale. He wrote an unfinished history of Connecticut Agricultural College.[2]
Personal life
[edit]In 1843, Gold married Caroline E. Lockwood of Bridgeport. They had three daughters: Eleanor Gold Hubbard, Rebecca Gold Cornell and Caroline Gold Gibson. Gold's first wife died in 1857.[6]
In 1859, Gold married Emma Tracey Baldwin (1835–1927) of Rockville. They had two sons and two daughters: Alice Gold Puttkamer, Martha Gold Morgan, Charles L. Gold, and James Gold.[6]
Gold died at his home in West Cornwall on March 20, 1906.[1] He was survived by his wife and children. His body was interred at the North Cornwall Cemetery.[7]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g Bongiorno, Joseph A. (2005). "In Pursuit of Intelligent Cultivation: Theodore Sedgwick Gold and Agriculture in Nineteenth Century Connecticut". Connecticut History Review. 44 (1): 48–76. doi:10.2307/44369667. ISSN 0884-7177. JSTOR 44369667. S2CID 254487470.
- ^ a b c d Spalding, J. A. (1891). Illustrated Popular Biography of Connecticut. Hartford, CT: Press of the Case, Lockwood & Brainard company, 1891. pp. 39–40. hdl:2027/hvd.hxtaw2.
- ^ Stemmons, Walter; Schenker, André (1931). Connecticut Agricultural College: A History. Storrs, CT: The University of Connecticut. OCLC 926142.
- ^ Stave, Bruce M. (2006). Red Brick in the Land of Steady Habits: Creating the University of Connecticut, 1881-2006. Hanover, NH: University of Connecticut. ISBN 978-1-58465-569-5. OCLC 917293142.
- ^ Cornwall Historical Society (n.d.). "Theodore Sedgwick Gold". www.cornwallhistoricalsociety.org. Retrieved 2020-08-21.
- ^ a b University of Connecticut Archives and Special Collections (1987). "Collection: T.S. Gold Family Papers | UConn Archives & Special Collections ArchivesSpace". archivessearch.lib.uconn.edu. Retrieved 2020-08-28.
- ^ "Theodore Sedgwick Gold (1818-1906)". www.findagrave.com. Retrieved 2020-08-29.