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Horace Lyman

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For his son, the journalist, historian, and educator, see Horace Sumner Lyman.
Horace Lyman
BornNovember 16, 1815
Massachusetts
DiedMarch 31, 1887 (1887-04-01) (aged 71)
Forest Grove, Oregon
Occupation(s)Reverend, professor
FamilyHorace Sumner Lyman (son)

Horace Lyman (November 16, 1815 – March 31, 1887) was a reverend and professor of mathematics in the U.S. state of Oregon.

He was born in Massachusetts, and came to Oregon by way of New York and Cape Horn in October 1848. He married Mary Dennison the next month. He established a school in Portland in 1849, and helped establish the Hillsboro School District in Hillsboro in 1851. He was a founder of Portland's First Congregational Church in June 1851. He was founding secretary of LaCreole Academic Institutue near Dallas, Oregon in 1856.

Lyman served as Hillsboro's first commissioner, and later its school superintendent. He later taught math at Pacific University in Forest Grove, where he died in 1887.

His son, Horace Sumner Lyman, was a prominent journalist, historian, and educator.

References

  1. "Biography of Prof. Horace Lyman – Access Genealogy". accessgenealogy.com. 24 May 2011. Retrieved 2018-01-15.
  2. ^ "Lyman, Reverend Horace - OHS Digital Collections". digitalcollections.ohs.org. Retrieved 2021-06-19.
  3. Cartwright, Charlotte M. (1903). "Glimpses of Early Days in Oregon" . Oregon Historical Quarterly. 4.
  4. Horner, John (1919). Oregon: Her history, her great men, her literature . p. 165.
  5. Philpott, Betty (October 19, 1976). "Schools and Churches: Hillsboro school began in one-room log cabin in 1854". The Hillsboro Argus. pp. 10–11.
  6. "Lyman, Reverend Horace - OHS Digital Collections". digitalcollections.ohs.org. Oregon Historical Society. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
  7. "Horace S. Lyman (obituary)". Oregon Historical Quarterly. 6. 1905.

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