Jonathan Pearsonby
Young Jonathan Peason appears to have received extensive preparatory training in New Hampshire. He moved with his father but stayed behind when his brother Caleb settled in Schenectady. There Jonathan was able to continue his education and graduated first in his class from Union College in 1835. He is said to have taught for a year in Philadelphia but returned to Schenectady where he taught science and natural history at Union for many years. He is said to have received an A.M. from Union in 1838. He also was the college treasurer and librarian. In April 1841, he married Mary Lord Hosford of Albany. The couple had three sons. Personal interest in his family's history led him to genealogy and then to the study and translation of documents relating to the history of New Netherland and New York. He is responsible for the production of many invalualable resources - most of which were published by his contemporary, Joel Munsell. Here are some links to what we have said about Professor Pearson so far: Jonathan Pearson died in 1887. Although he passed on almost a hundred years before we began our search for the social history of this early American community, Pearson was arguably the single most important contributor to reclaiming and interpreting the history of the people of colonial Albany. notes
Young Pearson kept a diary of his travels along the Erie Canal in 1822. Pearson left us many useful essays. Follow this link to more information about Jonathan Pearson on this website. Photograph printed on frontispiece of his
History of the Schenectady Patent. A portrait by Samuel Sexton
done in 1875 was reproduced in a Schenectady County Historical Society
newsletter in 2005.
privately posted: 2/5/06; revised 7/17/10
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