Biography of thaddeus stevens
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Thaddeus Stevens College was originally founded as a public institution for orphans of Pennsylvania who were willing to learn a trade combined with an academic education. The organization originally began as a three-year high school from a bequest in the will of Thaddeus Stevens, philanthropist and statesman. First opening its doors in , the school followed the principle No preference shall be shown on konto of race or color in admission to the school. They shall be fed at the same table, as stated in the Stevens will. The school began with 15 students in attendance.
As an institution, equity is in its founding principles. Thaddeus Stevens suffered from a physical disability and grew up in poverty, and he profoundly valued tillgång to opportunity and education. Through the legacy of his life and the bequest in his will, Thaddeus Stevens College of Technology today embodies those values.
In , the school converted from its three-year schema to a two-year educational
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Thaddeus Stevens
American statesman (–)
Thaddeus Stevens | |
|---|---|
Portrait by Brady-Handy, c. – | |
| In office March 4, – August 11, | |
| Preceded by | Anthony Roberts |
| Succeeded by | Oliver Dickey |
| Constituency | 9th district |
| In office March 4, – March 3, | |
| Preceded by | John Strohm |
| Succeeded by | Henry A. Muhlenberg |
| Constituency | 8th district |
| In office March 4, – March 3, | |
| Preceded by | John Sherman |
| Succeeded by | Justin Smith Morrill |
| In office December 11, – August 11, | |
| Preceded by | Position established |
| Succeeded by | Elihu B. Washburne |
| Born | ()April 4, Danville, Vermont, U.S. |
| Died | August 11, () (aged76) Washington, D.C., U.S. |
| Resting place | Shreiner-Concord Cemetery |
| Political party | Republican (from ) |
| Other political affiliations | Federalist (before ) Anti-Masonic (–) Whig (–) Know Nothing (–) |
| Domestic partner | Lydia Hamilton Smith (–) |
| Education | University of Vermont Dartmouth College ( • Remarkable Radical: Thaddeus StevensWhen the farmer complained, the school refused to let the wrongly accused man graduate. Stevens, unable to stomach this injustice, contacted the farmer on his own, fessed up, and made arrangements to pay damages. The farmer withdrew his complaint, and, within a few years, Stevens paid the farmer back. In gratitude, the farmer sent Stevens a hogshead of cider. The anecdote demonstrates early on in his life Stevens’s basic character—his rashness, his inconsistencies, his convictions, and his tenacity. We know Thaddeus Stevens as an ardent abolitionist who championed the rights of blacks for decades—up to, during, and after the Civil War. With other Radical Republicans, he agitated for emancipation, black fighting units, and black suffrage. After the war, he favored dividing up Southern plantations among the freed slaves, embracing William Tecumseh Sherman’s “forty acres and a mule.” Throughout his career, he championed re |