Member Directory,
1847 - 1922
Henry P. Tappan
Philosopher/University President
Centurion, 1847–unknown
Rhinebeck, New York
Vevey, Switzerland
Age forty-one
Archivist’s Notes
There is a possibility that he did not join the club despite documentation of his election, as his name does not appear in any subsequent printed rosters of membership. He may have chosen not to “qualify” for membership (i.e., pay initiation fees). The Century Association has traditionally recognized such cases as former members, however, as rosters were not published annually and it is possible he joined between printings. The monument to him at Green-Wood Cemetery is a cenotaph.
Century Memorial
Tappan was born in 1805 and died in 1881. A graduate of Union College in Schenectady and the Auburn Theological Seminary, he also received an honorary degree from Columbia (1854). He was professor of moral and intellectual philosophy at what is now New York University (from which he was dismissed for criticizing an inefficient administration), and was the first president of the University of Michigan. He also founded an astronomical observatory in Detroit. He published numerous books, including A Review of Edward’s Inquiry into the Freedom of the Will (1839), Elements of Logic (1844) and A Treatise on University Education (1851).
William A. Frosch
“Our Original Amateurs, 2009”