Controversy over the teaching of evolution and contest with William Jennings Bryan
The college had taught the theory of evolution for several decades when Wishart became president, and the college library carved the name of learned men on a frieze in the main reading room that included
Socrates,
Moses,
Plato, and Darwin. The instructor of the biology and zoology courses took pains to argue the compatibility of evolution and Christianity, but
William Jennings Bryan denounced evolution when he came to visit Wooster in 1923, declaring that "it is better to know the Rock of Ages than the age of rocks." Wishart defended the teaching of evolution at the college, and the issue became heated. At the 1923
General Assembly met in May, 1923, in
Indianapolis, Indiana, the college's position and Bryan's disagreement with it were widely known. The
New York Times reported that the nominations of Bryan and Wishart meant that "in a measure, the Presbyterian Church is being divided into evolutionists and anti-evolutionists." Bryan led on the first two ballots, but on the third ballot, two candidates from California withdrew and threw their support to Wishart, giving him a 451 to 427 victory. ==Chief publications==