Samuel McKinney
{{Short description|American Presbyterian minister (1807–1879)}}
{{about||the American Christian pastor and civil rights leader|Samuel B. McKinney}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Samuel McKinney
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| birth_date = March 19, 1807
| birth_place = County Antrim, Ireland
| death_date = November 27, 1879
| death_place = Huntsville, Texas, U.S.
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| alma mater = University of Pennsylvania
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| occupation = Clergyman, educator
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| spouse = Nancy Woodside Todd
| children = 5
| parents = Samuel McKinney
Margaret Findley
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}}
Samuel McKinney (1807–1879) was an Irish-born Presbyterian minister and educator in the American South, particularly Tennessee, Mississippi, and Texas. He founded the Chalmers Institute in Holly Springs, Mississippi, in 1850. He served as the founding president of Austin College in Huntsville, Texas, from 1850 to 1853, and again from 1862 to 1871.
Early life
Samuel McKinney was born on March 19, 1807, in County Antrim, Ireland.{{cite web |url=http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fmc74 |title= MCKINNEY, SAMUEL | first= Amelia W. | last=Williams | date= June 15, 2010| website= Handbook of Texas Online | publisher = Texas State Historical Association |access-date= September 6, 2015}}{{cite web |url=http://www.austincollege.edu/about/office-of-the-president/past-presidents/ |title= Past Presidents | website= Austin College |access-date= September 6, 2015}} His father was Samuel McKinney and his mother, Margaret Findley. He emigrated to the United States with his parents in 1812, settling in Philadelphia, but his youth was spent on a farm in Hawkins County, Tennessee.
Career
McKinney graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1832, where he received a degree in Theology, and also studied theology at the Reformed Presbyterian Theological Seminary. Licensed in 1832, he preached at scattered congregations before his ordination in 1835 and installation as the pastor of the Elkhorn Reformed Presbyterian Church in Oakdale, Illinois. During this pastorate, which concluded with his resignation in 1840,Glasgow, William M. A History of the Reformed Presbyterian Church in America. Baltimore: Hill and Harvey, 1888, 605. he also converted many Native Americans. He joined the Presbyterian Church in 1844.
Upon resigning his Oakdale pastorate, McKinney returned to Tennessee in 1840, first to preach in Shelby County and later to teach in Madison County. He taught at the Denmark Academy in Denmark. Later, he served as the president of the West Jackson College (a precursor to Union University) in Jackson.
McKinney founded Chalmers Institute, a boys' school in Holly Springs, Mississippi, in 1850.{{cite web |url=https://www.apps.mdah.ms.gov/nom/prop/22330.pdf |title= Historic Sites Survey: The Chalmers Institute | website = Mississippi Department of Archives and History |access-date= September 6, 2015}} During that time, he met Daniel Baker, a Presbyterian minister who served on its Board of Trustees. When Baker founded Austin College in Huntsville, Texas, in 1850, he hired McKinney as its first president until 1853.{{cite book |last=Haley |first=James L. |date=2015 |title=Sam Houston |location=Norman, Oklahoma |publisher=University of Oklahoma Press |page=415}}{{cite book |last=Littlejohn |first=Jeff |date=2009 |title=Huntsville |location=Mount Pleasant, South Carolina |publisher=Arcadia Publishing |page=34}} Though both men were initially on good terms, McKinney resigned due to a personal disagreement with Sam Houston.{{cite book |last=Roberts |first=Madge Thornall |date=2001 |title=The Personal Correspondence of Sam Houston: 1852-1863 |location=Denton, Texas |publisher=University of North Texas Press |page=55}} In any case, McKinney returned to Mississippi. However, during the American Civil War in 1862 McKinney returned to serve as president a second time until 1871.
Personal life
Death
McKinney died of dysentery on November 27, 1879.
References
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Category:Christian clergy from County Antrim
Category:Irish emigrants to the United States
Category:19th-century Irish Presbyterian ministers
Category:University of Pennsylvania alumni
Category:Austin College faculty
Category:Reformed Presbyterian Church (denominational group)
Category:Deaths from dysentery
Category:People from Hawkins County, Tennessee