Joseph Farrand Tuttle (1818-1901)

Tuttle, Joseph Farrand photo.jpg
Joseph Farrand Tuttle is buried at Oak Hill Cemetery, Crawfordsville, Indiana.

Joseph Farrand Tuttle is buried at Oak Hill Cemetery, Crawfordsville, Indiana.

Duties of Heads of Households (1850)

Revolutionary Fragments, Morris County, N.J. (1850, 1896)

The Life of William Tuttle, The Self-Made Man and Consistent Christian (1852)

An Address in Behalf of the Society for the Promotion of Collegiate and Theological Education at the West. Delivered at Its Tenth Anniversary, in Worcester, Massachusetts, October 26th, 1853 (1854)

Washington at Morristown During the Winters of 1776-77 & 1779-80 (1859)

Sketch of Rev. Barnabas King, D.D. (1862)

Address of Rev. James H. Johnston at the Inauguration of Rev. Joseph F. Tuttle, D.D., as President of Wabash College: and the Inaugural Discourse of the President Delivered July 24th, 1862 (1862)

The Late Dr. Lyman Beecher (1863)

Moses and Washington: A Discourse Delivered to the Students of Wabash College, February 21st, 1864 (1864)

Commencement Address (1865)

Who Shall Be Your Advisers? (1868)

May 1869 Letter to W.A. Whitehead, New Jersey Historical Society (1869)

The Early History of Morris County, New Jersey (1869, 1870)

The Way Lost and Found: A Book For the Young, Especially Young Men (1870)

New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Ohio, in 1787-8: Passages From the Journals of Rev. Manasseh Cutler, L.L. D. (1872)

The Higher Culture: Its Nature, Position, Method and Patrons - Being a Baccalaureate Discourse Delivered at Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Ind. (1872)

A Visit to Four Eastern Colleges (1872)

What is the Mission of Wabash College? (1873)

Physical Science and Christianity: A Baccalaureate Discourse, Delivered at Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Ind., June 22, 1873 (1873)

William Tuttle of New Haven: An Address Delivered at the Tuttle Gathering, New Haven, Conn., September 3d, 1873 (1873)

God’s Work in the World the Last Fifty Years: A Discourse Preached at Franklin, Indiana, November 29, 1874 (1874)

The Origin and Growth of Wabash College: Baccalaureate Discourse to the Class of 1876 (1876)

The Revolutionary Forefathers of Morris County, An Address Delivered at Morristown, N.J., July 4th, 1876 (1876)

Annals of Morris County (1876)

Baccalaureate Sermon, The Greek or the Christ! Delivered Before the Class of ‘77 (1877)

Presbyterianism on the Frontiers (1877)

“Forty-Four Years Ago This Morning”: An Address Delivered Before the Students in the College Chapel (1877)

Our Dead Brothers: An Address in the College Chapel, May 4, 1878 (1878)

Address by Joseph F. Tuttle, D.D. at the Memorial of the Rev. Henry Smith, D.D., LL.D. (1879)

Baccalaureate Sermon, What Must I Do To Be Saved? Delivered Before the Class of ‘80 (1880)

The World’s Millennium, and the Reasons for Expecting It: Baccalaureate, Delivered to the Class of ‘83, June 10, 1883 (1883)

Lane Seminary As I Saw It (1883, 1890)

A Memorial of Mrs. Christian Crawford Thomson, Mrs. Margaretta P. Thomson and Prof. Henry Rossman Thomson (1884)

Baccalaureate, The Carpenter of Nazareth, Delivered to the Class of ‘84, June 8, 1884 (1884)

Our Goodly Heritage, Delivered in the College Chapel (1884)

The Relations of Education to National Prosperity: Baccalaureate Sermon Delivered in Center Church Before the Class of ‘86, June 13, 1886 (1886)

Wants, Supply, Help: Baccalaureate Address to the Class of ‘87, July 12, 1887 (1887)

Address of Joseph F. Tuttle, D.D. at the Centennial Celebration at Marietta (1888)

Ebenezer: The Baccalaureate Address to the Class of ‘88, June 17, 1888 (1888)

The Temple of God: Baccalaureate Address to the Class of ‘91, June 14, 1891 (1891)

The Race: Baccalaureate Address to the Class of ‘92, June 12, 1892 (1892)

Rev. Jacob Green, of Hanover, N.J., as an Author, Statesman and Patriot (1893)

“The Unexpected, Because of God” (1894)

The Search For the Lost Writings of the Rev. Jacob Green, of Hanover, Morris County (1896)


Rev. Tuttle’s address begins at p. 17.

Rev. Tuttle’s address begins at p. 17.

Rev. Tuttle’s address begins at p. 132.

Rev. Tuttle’s address begins at p. 132.