Lake Forest University After graduation, Kelsey was appointed instructor of classics at
Lake Forest University, a new college in the northern suburbs of Chicago. Within his first couple of years he wrote articles for a college journal called the Lake Forest University Review, on his views of the classics and eventually become editor. While at Lake Forest University, he visited Europe to learn more about archaeology. His first visits were to
Pompeii but he also visited some German Universities. He attended
Leipzig University in 1884 to expand his knowledge on classical archaeology. In 1885 he was back in Southern Europe visiting Italy, Greece, and Asia Minor, discovering different ways to teach the classics. At Lake Forest, Kelsey also started his textbook writing career. One of his textbooks, ''
Caesar's Gallic War'', went through twenty one editions in his lifetime. A conflict at Lake Forest over the appropriate roles of research and teaching there led to the departure of Kelsey and other faculty members.
University of Michigan Kelsey started at the
University of Michigan in 1889 as professor of
Latin. From his first semester he made sure the books his students needed were available to check out at the library. This practice was new for the time and would not become precedent until 1915. Kelsey made sure his classes were not just on the languages he was teaching but the culture and the context of the times, and set up a classical fellowship to study archaeology. When Tappan became president in 1852, he no longer made classical language a requirement and created a
Bachelor of Science. This eventually led to a drop of 40% of undergraduate students, but an increase in grad students studying classics in Kelsey's time. Between 1900 and 1901, Kelsey took a year off to teach at the
American School of Classical Studies in
Rome. Once Kelsey returned, his time abroad contributed to him becoming the lead American scholar on
Pompeii. In 1902 he was selected to be the secretary of the
Archaeological Institute of America (AIA). Throughout his tenure as secretary, he tried to pass legislation within congress about how artifacts from other countries should be handled by the United States. After a stalemate within congress, the AIA teamed up with the
American Anthropological Association to eventually pass a resolution in 1905, the same year he was named Vice President of the
American Philological Association. By the end of 1906 he was elected president of the
American Philological Association. Kelsey was a major factor behind the construction of
Hill Auditorium, one of the concert halls designed by
Albert Kahn and opened in 1913. Kelsey sought out Detroit architect Albert Kahn and discussed the possibility of Hill Auditorium with him. Kelsey gave Kahn two options of where to construct the building, he eventually picked the location on North State street that thousands of students now walk past and perform in regularly. While the organ for UMS and Hill Auditorium were mostly one time fundraising projects, Kelsey was constantly fundraising to ensure his research, associations he was a part of, and the overall Classics Department. In 1904 Kelsey started his own research oriented journal called the ''
University of Michigan's Humanistic Series'' that he was editor of from 1904 to 1927.
Expeditions to the Near-East Starting in 1919, Kelsey was talking to
Detroit manufacturer Standish Backish who showed interest in putting together an expedition to the Near East. Backish was talking to a professor, Caspar Rene Gregory, who, after he died in World War I, inspired him to organize an expedition for the retrieval of biblical documents. Standish considered himself too old, so he asked Kelsey to lead it. Kelsey agreed and fundraising started. This first expedition started by ship from the East Coast to Glasgow, making its way to
London, then
Paris and eventually towards
Constantinople, Near East, and
Asia Minor. The entire expedition was expected to take two years, one for exploration and the other for writing and research which would be done between London and Paris since at the time, that is where the only copies of other ancient manuscripts were located. While originally Backish suggested that the main objective be for the retrieval of biblical texts, it was also brought up that documentation of the battlefields that
Julius Caesar fought on should also be researched and heavily photographed. Overall the expedition was a huge success, Kelsey returned with Isabelle and Easton to
Ann Arbor in 1921 to resume teaching. He went on a second expedition in 1927 that yielded even more antiquities and papyrus, specifically from Egypt. ==Personal life==