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Thomas W. Bicknell

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Thomas Bicknell

Thomas W. Bicknell (6 September 1834 – 1925), American educator, historian, and author, lived to be 91.

Bicknell, born in Barrington, Rhode Island, he was the son of a farmer, minister, state legislator, and Colonel in the Bristol County, Rhode Island Militia, Thomas would become a wealthy eastern historian and educator from Providence, Rhode Island, he was the State of Rhode Island's Education Commissioner.


Bicknell was the founder of the National Society of the Sons and Daughters of the Pilgrims and Order of the Founders and Patriots of America (1898). He re-established, and was the president of, the American Institute of Instruction. President of the New England Publishing Company. President of the Rhode Island Institute of Instruction and the National Educational Association.


Author, editor, publisher of the "New England Journal of Education", Boston, 1875-1880. Author, of a five-volume "History of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations", "The Governors of Rhode Island", "The Dorr War", "The Story of the Rhode Island Normal School", "Story of Dr. John Clarke", and the "History and Genealogy of the Bicknell Family and Collateral Lines". Contributing author to "The Bay State Monthly" magazine.

Attended Thetford Academy and Amherst College, taught school and became principal in Rehoboth, Massachusetts, then principal in Elgin, Illinois.


Signed on to help settle the State of "Free Kansas". On the way to Kansas he was taken hostage by bandits on the Missouri River, but after two weeks as a prisoner, sharpshooters set him adrift.

Returned to Rehoboth, serving as principal once again, earned a masters degree from Brown University. While a senior at Brown he was elected State Representative in the Rhode Island General Assembly. After graduating from Brown, he became principal of Bristol High School and then Arnold Street Grammar School, then back to Bristol H.S.

Thomas W. Bicknell and others in front of Dr. John Clarke's grave in Newport (from Bicknell's "Story of Dr. John Clarke")

Rhode Island Governor Seth Padelford (Republican 1869-1873) selected Bicknell to be the new Commissioner of Public Schools in 1869. As commissioner he focused on re-establishing the Normal School, now Rhode Island College. He was a gifted speaker and fundraiser, who would triple the amount of money spent on public education, he also would establish a Rhode Island State Board of Education, oversee the selection of school superintendents in every town and city in the state, dedicate over 50 new schoolhouses, and increase the school year from 27-weeks to 35-weeks.


Bicknell as a reformer.

Bicknell was an equaligist, a racial and sexual reformer, an early advocate to end Black segregation in schools; he also helped elect the United States' first all-female school board for the town of Tiverton, Rhode Island.


Heritage

In 1914, wanting to have a town named for him, offered a 1000-volume library to any town in Utah that would adopt his name. Two towns vied for the prize, Grayson and Thurber, the two towns compromised and in 1916 Thurber changed its name to Bicknell, and Grayson took the name of Blanding, Mr. Bicknell's wife's maiden name, and the two towns split the library with 500 books to each.[1]

He and his wife, Amelia D. Bicknell, donated $500 dollars to the Rehoboth Antiquarian Society, in Rehoboth, to establish the Blanding Public Library in the memory of Amelia's parents, Christopher and Chloe Blanding.


In addition to education, he was also very active in civic activates and the church. He served as Commissioner from Rhode Island to the Universal Exposition at Vienna, Austria. He helped establish the U.S. Postal Code system as a member of the 1878 Postal Congress. He served as President in over thirty associations and organizations, and member in over one hundred. He was president of the International Sunday School Union, the Massachusetts Congregational Sunday School Union, the Chautauqua Teachers’ Reading Union, and the New England Sunday School Association.

References

  1. ^ Van Cott, John W. (1990). Utah Place Names. Salt Lake City, Utah: University of Utah Press. p. 31. ISBN 0-87480-345-4.

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