John B. Van Meter Explained

Honorific Prefix:The Reverend
John Blackford Van Meter
Office:Acting President of Goucher College
Predecessor:Eugene Allen Noble
Successor:William Westley Guth
Office2:Dean of Women's College of Baltimore
Termend2:1914
Termstart2:1885
Birth Date:September 6, 1842
Birth Place:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Death Date:April 8, 1930 (age 87)
Death Place:Baltimore, Maryland
Resting Place:Green Mount Cemetery
Term Start:1911
Term End:1913

John Blackford Van Meter (September 6, 1842 – April 8, 1930) was an American Methodist minister, educator, and the co-founder of Goucher College. Van Meter also served as the college's first dean and as acting president from 1911 to 1913.

Early life and education

Van Meter was born on September 6, 1842, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Thomas Hurley Van Meter and Johnetta Blackford. He was of English and French descent, and his grandmother was a Quaker. He graduated from Male Central High School in Baltimore, which later became Baltimore City College. Van Meter did not pursue a college degree, which he said was due to his lack of financial means.

Career

Methodist ministry and Navy

After graduating high school, Van Meter worked as a teacher and later as a principal for several local schools. After briefly contemplating studying law, he instead pursued a career in the Methodist ministry. In the 1860s, he was a minister and preacher at several churches in Maryland and Pennsylvania. In December 1866, Van Meter married Lucinda Cassell of Westminster, Maryland. In December 1871, Van Meter was commissioned into the United States Navy as a chaplain and confirmed by the Senate in January 1872.[1] He resigned from the Navy in April 1882.[2]

Founding of the Women's College of Baltimore City

Through his involvement with the Methodist church in the Baltimore area, he became acquainted with fellow minister John Franklin Goucher, who would advocate for Van Meter's appointment to the annual Baltimore Methodist Conference. In the early 1880s, the Baltimore Conference was considering the establishment of a women's college, deliberations in which Van Meter and Goucher became heavily involved.[3]

The women of the conference formed an association through which they pushed for such an institution, and Van Meter supported their efforts, at one point exclaiming that "the Conference [should] make the foundation and endowment of a female college the single object of its organized effort." Goucher and his wife, Mary Fisher Goucher, offered to help endow the institution, and in 1885, the Women's College of Baltimore City, now Goucher College, was chartered.

Dean and acting president of Goucher

In 1910, the Women's College of Baltimore was renamed to Goucher College, in honor of co-founder John Goucher. In 1911, Goucher's third president, Eugene Allan Noble, stepped down. Van Meter, who was then the dean, was asked by the board of trustees to serve as acting president while they searched for a permanent replacement. Van Meter held the position of acting president from 1911 to 1913, during which time financial difficulties, namely persistent annual deficits and growing debt, threatened the survival of the school. With support from nearby educational institutions and associates and alumni of the college, the college completed a $1-million fundraising campaign, which was enough to sustain it.[4] Van Meter reassumed his position as dean when the administration named William Westley Guth as the college's fourth president. Van Meter also remained on the faculty as a professor of English and biblical studies. Van Meter stepped down from his position as dean at Goucher in 1914, and in 1920 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by the school.

Later years

Van Meter lived out his final years in Baltimore, Maryland. He died in 1930 and was buried in Green Mount Cemetery.

References

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Budd, Richard M.. Serving two masters : the development of American military chaplaincy, 1860-1920. University of Nebraska Press. 2002. 0803213220. Lincoln, Nebraska. 84. 47623801.
  2. Book: Knipp, Anna Heubeck. The history of Goucher College. Thomas. Thaddeus P. (Thaddeus Peter). 1938. Baltimore, Md., Goucher College. Goucher College. 1–20, 176–177, 254, 320.
  3. News: Goucher College. Croft. Clare. The Baltimore Sun. 2018-10-08. en-US.
  4. Web site: History of the Buildings on Goucher's Towson Campus Goucher College. Goucher College. en. 2018-10-08.