William Mitchel Daily Explained

William Mitchel Daily
Order:3rd
President of Indiana University
Term Start:1853
Term End:1859
Predecessor:Alfred Ryors
Successor:John Hiram Lathrop
Order1:35th
Title1:United States House of Representatives Chaplain
Term Start1:1844
Term End1:1845
Predecessor1:Isaac S. Tinsley
Successor1:William Henry Milburn
Birth Place:Coshocton, Ohio, US
Death Place:New Orleans, Louisiana
Resting Place:Madison, Indiana
Nationality:American
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Ordained:1833

William Mitchel Daily (1812–February 5, 1877) was an American academic, preacher and theologian. He served as the third president of Indiana University and resigned under pressure after fewer than six years. He served a one-year term as the chaplain of the US House of Representatives and also served as a hospital chaplain during the US Civil War.

Early life and education

William Daily was born in 1812 in Coshocton, Ohio. Later that year his father moved to a farm in Franklin County and Daily spent his childhood there.[1] He attended the country school, and later attended school in Brookville. At fifteen years of age he took charge of a school in an adjoining county. Daily was baptized as a baby and grew up in the Methodist Episcopal Church, and was preaching by age 16. He joined the Conference in 1831, was ordained deacon in 1833, and elder in 1835. Daily was stationed in Bloomington, Indiana in 1835-1836 where he had duties as a local pastor and was a student at Indiana University. He graduated from the university in 1836.

Early career

Daily was an agent of the Preacher's Aid Society in 1837, then was transferred to the Missouri Conference in 1838 and stationed in St. Louis. Shortly thereafter he became a professor at St. Charles College. Daily returned to Indiana in 1840 after a lung hemorrhage. In 1843 he took charge of a congregation in Madison, Indiana. While there he met Permelia A. Northcraft and they married. He was a chaplain in the United States Congress in the winter of 1844-1845, then stationed at Rising Sun and Evansville. During this time he was made agent for Indiana Asbury (now DePaw) University, then a presiding elder of the Bloomington and Madison districts. Daily was a member of the General Conference in 1852.

Daily attended and chaired the first session of the newly created Indiana State Teachers Association on December 25, 1854. He would go on to be elected the association's first President serving in that role until 1855.

Tenure at Indiana University

William Daily was elected a trustee of Indiana University on February 10, 1853, and was seated on July 30, 1853. His resignation of the post was accepted by the Board of Trustees on August 2, 1853. He had served for one and a half days. His place was taken by Cyrus L. Dunham. The current Indiana University President at the time, Alfred Ryors, resigned on August 3, 1853, and William Daily was elected the third President of Indiana University that same day.

In July 1858, charges were brought against Daily by A. M. Murphy. He was accused of being incompetent, not paying debts, plagiarism, immorality, and not being a proper disciplinarian.[2] On July 13, 1858, the eight members of the Board of Trustees met to consider the charges, but were unwilling to do so without proper evidence. Murphy then withdrew the charges, for reasons unknown, and the matter was not resolved. Daily attended the annual Indiana Methodist Conference that fall, but criticism of his behavior continued. He resigned under pressure on January 26, 1859. In the fall of 1859, the Indiana Methodist Conference examined the case of William Daily and decided to expel him. Daily had been the first Methodist to hold an important position at Indiana University.

Late career

In 1862, Abraham Lincoln appointed Daily hospital chaplain at St. Louis, where he remained until the end of the war in 1865. Daily was associated with the Louisiana Conference in 1869, and was appointed in turn to the Baton Rouge district and the Upper Coast district, each for a four-year term. After that, he was appointed to the North New Orleans district but became seriously ill shortly after and died a few days later on February 5, 1877. A few months after his death, his remains were moved to Madison, Indiana.

Education

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Myers, Burton. Trustees and Officers of Indiana University: 1820 to 1950. 1851. Indiana University.
  2. Book: Woodburn, James. History of Indiana University. 1940. Indiana University.