The Noah Webster House &
West Hartford Historical Society
To Noah Webster
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Noah Webster Fact Sheet
(Part of
educational pages for children)
- The
name, Webster, means “female weaver.”
- He
went to Yale and was the only one of the Webster’s
five children to go past grammar school.
- Noah
and Nathan Hale were at Yale at the same time: Hale
was three years ahead of Noah.
- He socialized with Ben Franklin, who was known
as quite a lively character.
- When he asked his father for money to study
law, his father gave him worthless currency.
- Noah loved music and dancing.
- He once lived in a house in New Haven that
belonged to Benedict Arnold.
- Noah and Rebecca had six daughters and two
sons.
- He was invited to the White House for dinner
but was uncomplimentary of this event.
- The dictionary took Noah 27 years to compile
and was published when he was 70 years old.
- Noah’s, An American Dictionary, published
in 1828, contained 70,000 words.
- As an adult, Noah was frequently in debt.
- Noah’s
New Haven home was saved by Henry Ford and
moved to Greenfield Village, Michigan
- Noah became more conservative in politics and
religion as he aged.
- Though known as an abolitionist, he did not
believe that blacks were equal to whites.
- Noah received less than one cent per copy from
the 25 million of The Blue-Backed Spellers
sold in his lifetime.
- Possibly as many as 100 million copies of the
Blue Back Speller were sold through the end
of the 19th century.
- Noah was very outspoken and frequently pointed
out the flaws of others.
- Noah
was not elected to the Constitutional Convention
because of his open criticism of Connecticut
leaders’ financing
of the Revolutionary War.
- Noah’s
remained committed to education throughout
his life. He believed that the survival of
the United States depended on its educated
people.
- Noah
died in 1843 at the age of 86. He is buried
in New Haven’s Grove Street Cemetery.
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