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  1. Jonathan Dickinson (April 22, 1688 – October 7, 1747) was a Congregational, later Presbyterian, minister, a leader in the Great Awakening of the 1730s and 1740s, and a co-founder and first president of the College of New Jersey, which later became Princeton University.

  2. Jonathan Dickinson (born April 22, 1688, Hatfield, Massachusetts, U.S.—died October 7, 1747, Elizabethtown, New Jersey) was a prominent Presbyterian clergyman of the American colonial period and the first president of Princeton University.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Jonathan Dickinson (1688-1747) was a critical figure in the founding of the College of New Jersey, helping to secure the college’s charter and serving as its first president. Dickinson studied theology at what would become Yale College before his ordination as a Presbyterian minister in Elizabethtown, New Jersey in 1709.

  4. Jonathan Dickinson (1688-1747), Princeton's first President, died after only four and a half months in office and is chiefly remembered for having been the leader of the little group who, in his words, "first concocted the plan and foundation of the College."

  5. Sep 6, 2023 · During the Great Awakening, Jonathan Dickinson and his colleagues made plans to found a college to train Presbyterian ministers. Today, Stephen Nichols introduces us to the first president of Princeton University.

  6. Nov 26, 2013 · After graduating from the Collegiate School of Connecticut (later known as Yale University), Dickinson studied theology and became minister of the Presbyterian Church in Elizabeth, New Jersey.

  7. Jonathan Dickinson and the Making of the Moderate Awakening by Leigh Eric Schmidt IN HIS FUNERAL SERMON occasioned by the death of Jonathan Dickinson, the Rev erend John Pierson, a close friend of the Elizabethtown divine, extolled Dickinson as a faithful shepherd with "a truly pacific Temper" and one who would "sacrifice