Hezekiah Balch


Hezekiah Balch, D.D. was a Presbyterian minister and one of the co-founders of Tusculum College, originally called Greeneville College.

Early life and education

He was born in 1741 in Harford County, Maryland along Deer Creek. There is very little information about Balch's early life. His parents are Col. James Balch and Anne Goodwin. Family tradition states that Balch was named after his father. Other sources disagree that the elder Hezekiah Balch was his father referring to the man as his cousin. While he was still a child, Balch's family moved south to Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. Due to the recommendation of a local preacher, he attended Princeton starting in 1758. In 1766, Balch received his Master of Arts from Princeton and was ordained in 1770. While at Princeton, he was one of the founders of the Cliosophic Society.

Work

Balch's first acts as a pastor were as a missionary in the rural areas of Maryland, Pennsylvania, and North Carolina. After his travels as a missionary, he settled in Greeneville, Tennessee and then founded a church in 1783. Balch was a part of a group of Presbyterian preachers in Eastern Tennessee who taught a form of abolitionist Evangelicalism. This formed the basis of the abolitionist movement in the state in the 1830s. Due to the growth in the number of congregations in the area, Balch worked to establish a presbytery in Greeneville in 1800.
In 1795 he helped found Greeneville College, the first college west of the Appalachian Mountains, in Greeneville, Tennessee. The school's first location was a frame building on Balch's farm. At the first meeting of the school's board of trustees, on 18 February 1795, Balch was chosen as the college's president. He stayed in the position until his death in 1810. After being named the college president, Balch traveled through New England raising money for the new college. In 1805, Balch received a Doctor of Divinity from Williams College.

Death

The last years of Balch's life were plagued with illness, but in April 1810, Balch came down with "brief but most distressing illness" and died. He was buried in Harmony Graveyard in Greeneville, Tennessee.
The inscription on the tomb of Rev. Balch is as follows.:

Footnotes