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Comments Tagged ‘public/private’

  • Economy 71-81 (1 comment)

    • Comment by Paul Schacht on February 17, 2026

      Glad you wondered about this, @ekclodfelter! Thoreau’s example here, “Cambridge College” (i.e., Harvard University), though established by an act of the pre-revolutionary Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1636, is a private, not public, university. Thomas Jefferson founded the University of Virginia in 1819, two years after Thoreau was born, but public higher education in the US as we know it today, with various states funding public systems, really came into being with the Morrill Land Grant Acts beginning in 1862, the year Thoreau died. These acts gave rise to the so-called “land-grant universities“, which began as agricultural schools. It would be interesting to know what Thoreau would have thought of them. I don’t know whether Thoreau did comment on public higher education in his lifetime.

      For what it’s worth, I don’t see where Thoreau, in this passage, expresses opposition to public funding of higher education. In addition, I’d say that, in any case, it’s hard in general to translate, from Thoreau’s time to ours, political opinions on questions like the relationship between the public and private spheres, and even harder to predict what Thoreau, or anyone in the past, would think about a particular phenomenon or issue in the present. But I think it’s at least worth noting that in his Journal for October 15, 1859, Thoreau wrote the following:

      “Each town should have a park, or rather a primitive forest, of five hundred or a thousand acres, where a stick should never be cut for fuel, a common possession forever, for instruction and recreation. We hear of cow-commons and ministerial lots, but we want mew- commons and lay lots, inalienable forever. Let us keep the New World new, preserve all the advantages of living in the country.”

      He continues:

      “As some give to Harvard College or another institution, why might not another give a forest or huckleberry-field to Concord? A town is an institution which deserves to be remembered. We boast of our system of education, but why stop at schoolmasters and schoolhouses? We are all schoolmasters, and our school-house is the universe.”

Source: https://commons.digitalthoreau.org/walden/comments/tags/public-private/