Moses Fisk
Moses Fisk (June 11, 1760 – July 26, 1840) was a pioneer settler of Tennessee. Fisk established the unincorporated community of Hilham, Tennessee on the Tennessee portion of the Cumberland Plateau, and the Fisk Female Academy—one of the first such educational institutions in the South. There is no known connection between Fisk Female Academy and Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee, nor between Fisk University patron Clinton B. Fisk and Moses Fisk.
In addition to being a Dartmouth graduate and educator, Moses Fisk was a mathematician, surveyor, author, road builder, lawyer, postmaster, minister, musician, land speculator, merchant, and farmer.[1]
Fisk was a staunch abolitionist and an advocate for Native Americans. He was also an important figure in documenting and preserving the Native American archeology and anthropology of the area. Fisk was a charter member of the American Antiquarian Society, and is considered to be "the Upper Cumberland’s first antiquarian."[2]
References
- ^ Barlow, Tim (1980). The Life and Writings of Moses Fisk (First ed.). Collegedale, Tennessee: College Press. p. 3.
- ^ Williams, Randal. "Moses Fisk: the Upper Cumberland's First Antiquarian" (PDF). Denny-Loftis Genealogy. Audrey Lambert. Retrieved 7 April 2017.
- 1760 births
- 1840 deaths
- American abolitionists
- Farmers from Tennessee
- American lawyers
- Mathematicians from Tennessee
- Tennessee pioneers
- Tennessee postmasters
- Dartmouth College alumni
- Members of the American Antiquarian Society
- Native Americans' rights activists
- American city founders
- 19th-century American mathematicians
- 18th-century American mathematicians