Thornwell Jacobs

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Thornwell Jacobs bigraphy, stories - Refounder of Oglethorpe University

Thornwell Jacobs : biography

15 February 1877 – 4 August 1956

Thornwell Jacobs (1877–1956) was an educator, author, and a Presbyterian minister.

Death

Jacobs died August 4, 1956. He is buried at the First Presbyterian Church cemetery in Clinton, South Carolina.

Adult life

Jacobs served as a Presbyterian pastorate in Morganton at the Presbyterian Church from 1900-1903. He then worked in advertising in Nashville, Tennessee, until 1905. After this time Jacobs began institutional support for the Thornwell Orphanage.

Other

In 1922 Jacobs rediscovered the burial place of General James Edward Oglethorpe in Cranham, England.

Crypt of Civilization

Jacobs originated the Crypt of Civilization time capsule at Oglethorpe University. It was sealed off with steel doors in 1940. According to the Guinness Book of World Records it is "the first successful attempt to bury a record of this culture for any future inhabitants or visitors to the planet Earth." Guinness Book of World Records 1990.

Jacobs initially planned and designed the Crypt of Civilization storage space to preserve information of the early 20th century in 1935. He discussed this proposal in an article in Scientific American, November 1936, because he was struck by the dearth of information on the ancient civilizations. Jacobs wrote of a unique plan to present a "running story" of life and customs. He wanted to show the accumulated knowledge of mankind up until his time.

The Crypt was sealed on May 28, 1940. It is intended to be opened May 28, 8113 C.E.. Jacobs is known as the "father of the modern time capsule." George Edward Pendray is the person responsible for coining the term time capsule.New York Times, August 19, 1938, page 21 Pendray is also the one responsible for the Westinghouse time capsule that was buried in 1938 for the 1939 New York World’s Fair. Pendray "borrowed" the original idea from Jacobs. Originally Westinghouse’s project was named "time bomb".

The date of 8113 C.E. was calculated by Jacobs from the first fixed date in history, 4241 B.C.E. This is the time that most historians believe was when the Egyptian calendar was established. The Crypt’s projected intended opening is in exactly 6177 years. This is the number of years between 4241 BCE and 1936 CE. Jacobs projected the same period of time forward from 1936 giving this opening date of 8113.

Career

Jacobs is noted for revitalizing and rebuilding the antebellum college of Oglethorpe University. He became its president on January 21, 1915 and continued in that position for nearly three decades. Oglethorpe University, named after James Edward Oglethorpe, the founder of the colony of Georgia, had been chartered a Presbyterian institution in 1835. It had been shut down during the American Civil War and did not successfully reopen until Jacobs intervened.

Works

  • Sinful Saddy (1907)
  • The Law of the White Circle (1908), a novella.
  • Midnight Mummer (poems) (1911)
  • The Oglethorpe Story (1916)
  • Life of William Plumer Jacobs (1918)
  • New Science and the Old Religion (1927)
  • Islands of the Blest (poems) (1928)
  • Oglethorpe Book of Georgia Verse (1930)
  • Diary of William Plumber Jacobs (1937)
  • William Plumber Jacobs Memorabilla (1942)
  • Red Lanterns on St. Michael’s (1940), an historical novel about the Siege of Charleston during the American Civil War.
  • Story of Christmas (1941)
  • Drums of Doomsday (1942), a novel about a visionary Presbyterian minister who attempts to bring religion to Hollywood.
  • Step down, Dr. Jacobs (1945)
  • When For The Truth – A Novel of Reconstruction Days in South Carolina, Dr. Thornwell Jacobs, Copyright, 1950. "Foreword – Probably the deepest bathos of political corruption and ineptitude in the whole history of government is to be found in the story of the "RECONSTRUCTION" of South Carolina. It was the reductio ad adsurdun of "more democracy and more democracy and more democracy." It foreshadowed ominously the present furor over "Civil Rights." It was the worst tangle of racial, social, economic and political forces ever to bind a State to a rotting bed of death. It was also the occasion for as fine an exhibition of bravery on the part of an alarmed and determined citizenry as the world has ever known, So far as I know, its full story has never been told in novel form. It is offered herein with the hope and belief that regardless of the quality of its plot, technique and love-story, the reader will find historical facts, background and lessons to be of transcendent importance and fascinating interest." Submitted by James A. Jordan, Greenville, SC

Early life

Jacobs was born in Clinton, South Carolina, February 15, 1877, at the Thornwell Orphanage.Who Was Who, p. 443 The orphanage was founded by his father, Reverend William Plumer Jacobs. His mother was Mary Jane (Dillard) Jacobs.

Jacobs learned the printing trade while he was still quite young. Later he earned the Bachelor of Arts degree and Master of Arts degree from South Carolina’s Presbyterian College in 1895, also founded by his father. He also graduated from Princeton Theological Seminary in New Jersey in 1899.

His grandfather Ferdinand Jacobs taught Mathematics and Astronomy at the antebellum Oglethorpe University, based in Milledgeville, GA, from 1845-1849.