Horace Mann
Horace Mann (1796-1859) was an educator and politician who helped set up the first public schools in the United States. He did this in the state of Massachusetts. Mann personally visited every school in the state to inspect it. He later became the first president of Antioch College in Ohio. “Our means of education,” he stated, “are the grand machinery by which the ‘raw material’ of human nature can be worked up into inventors and discoverers, into skilled artisans and scientific farmers.”
Horace Mann | |
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Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Massachusetts's 8th district | |
In office April 3, 1848 – March 3, 1853 | |
Preceded by | John Quincy Adams |
Succeeded by | Tappan Wentworth |
Personal details | |
Born | Franklin, Massachusetts | May 4, 1796
Died | August 2, 1859 Yellow Springs, Ohio | (aged 63)
Resting place | North Burial Ground, Providence, Rhode Island |
Political party | Whig Free Soil |
Spouse(s) | Charlotte Messer Mann (d. 1832) Mary Peabody Mann |
Relations | Thomas Mann (father) Rebecca Stanley Mann (mother) Stephen Mann (Brother) Louise Mann (Sister) |
Children | Horace Mann Jr. George Combe Mann Benjamin Pickman Mann |
Alma mater | Brown University Litchfield Law School |
Occupation | Lawyer Educator College president |
Signature |
Horace Mann Media
Original daguerreotype of Rep. Mann (Mass.) from Mathew Brady's a studio, c. 1849
Mann on a 1940 stamp from the Famous Americans series
Statue of Horace Mann (1863) by Emma Stebbins
Horace Mann School, the Bronx, New York City
Horace Mann House at Brown University, Mann's alma mater