George Dabney
George Edward Dabney (1808–1868) was an educator and scholar of classics, who served on the faculty of Washington College (now Washington and Lee University) from 1837 to 1854.
George Dabney | |
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Born | George Edward Dabney 1808 |
Died | 1868 |
Occupation | Educator and scholar |
Early life
George Dabney was born in 1808. He graduated from the University of Virginia.
Career
Dabney taught at New London Academy in Bedford County, Virginia. Later, he taught ancient languages at Washington College in 1837.[1] He delivered a graduation address at Washington College in 1838 on the importance of studying classics[2] and published "On the Study of Ancient Languages in the United States," in the Southern Literary Messenger in 1851. He also delivered an address "on the value of writing," to the alumni of the University of Virginia in June 1849.
Dabney was, with fellow Washington College professor Henry Ruffner, active in the anti-slavery movement in western Virginia and he freed several of his slaves in the 1850s.
Death
Dabney died in 1868.
References
- A.J. Morrison, The Beginnings of Public Education in Virginia, 1776-1860, 27 (1917)
- George Edward Dabney, Lecture on the Study of the Classics, Delivered in Washington College, Lexington, Va., Sept. 10, 1838 (Richmond: Thomas W. Whyte, 1838).