Thomas Day Seymour

Thomas Day Seymour
Born (1848-04-01)April 1, 1848
Hudson, Ohio
Died December 31, 1907(1907-12-31) (aged 59)
New Haven, Connecticut
Alma mater Western Reserve Academy
Occupation Classics scholar
Employer Western Reserve College
Yale University
Spouse(s) Sarah Melissa Hitchcock
Children Elizabeth Day
Clara Hitchcock
Charles Seymour
Thomas Day Seymour
Academic work
Main interests Homeric poetry

Thomas Day Seymour (April 1, 1848 – December 31, 1907)[1] was an American classical scholar.[2] He spent most of his career as a Professor of Greek at Yale University and published primarily on the works of Homer.

Life

Born in Hudson, Ohio, Seymour graduated with a B.A. in 1870 at Western Reserve College,[2] where his father, Nathan Perkins Seymour, was Long Professor of Greek and Latin. He received an ad eundem degree from Yale in 1870, and honorary LL.D. degrees from Western Reserve in 1894,[2] from Glasgow University in 1901, and from Harvard University in 1906.[1]

After studying in Berlin and Leipzig and making many visits to Greece,[1] Seymour returned to Western Reserve College as professor of Greek from 1872-1880 before becoming professor of Greek at Yale University in 1880, holding his position until his death in New Haven.[1]

From 1887 to 1901 Seymour was chairman of the managing committee of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens,[2] and was president of the Archaeological Institute of America from 1903. He was one of the American editors of the Classical Review.[1][3]

He was the father of Yale President Charles Seymour, and the great-nephew of Yale President Jeremiah Day.

He married Sarah Melissa Hitchcock (b. Sep. 27, 1846) of Burton, Ohio on July 2, 1874. She was the granddaughter of Justice Peter Hitchcock.[2] They had three children; Elizabeth Day Seymour (b. Jan 21, 1876) was his eldest daughter, and she married John Angel (sculptor) in 1942.[4] Clara Hitchcock Seymour was born on March 28, 1880 and his youngest child Charles Seymour was born on Jan. 1, 1885.[2]

Publications

Other than his Selected Odes of Pindar (1882),[5] Seymour's published work was largely confined to the study of the Homeric poems, viz:

References

External links

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