Manual Labor Academy of Pennsylvania at Germantown While at Hamilton College, Monteith had become enamored of the manual labor concept of education.
George Washington Gale, a fellow alumnus of the
Princeton Theological Seminary, was then living nearby, and had begun to read about New England
manual labor schools modeled on those established by
Philipp Emanuel von Fellenberg and
Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi and by the Alsatian pastor
J. F. Oberlin. Monteith observed first-hand Gale's new
Oneida Manual Labor Institute at nearby
Whitesboro. When he left his position in New York, Monteith headed to
Germantown outside Philadelphia, to organize the Manual Labor Academy of Pennsylvania. It commenced operation on May 1, 1829, with four students in his care, enrolling a total of twenty-five within six months. Under Monteith's guidance, students studied subjects such as mathematics, surveying, geography, and bookkeeping, and also engaged in "useful bodily labor" for three or four hours a day. Students gardened and farmed, built furniture and mended buildings. Students who could not otherwise afford to attend college were able to defray their expenses through their own labor. Unfortunately, the trustees were unable to meet the expenses of the purchase of the land through additional sale of stock, and the institution struggled financially. A year after opening the new academy, Monteith's former
Jefferson College classmate
George Junkin joined him in Germantown. When Monteith resigned as principal of the academy, Junkin stayed on another year, and then moved the academy to
Easton, Pennsylvania, where it became the foundation of the infant
Lafayette College. Junkin became Lafayette's first president. Because of this circumstance, Lafayette claims that John Monteith was the college's first professor. Between 1830 and 1832, Monteith was principal of the
Cambridge Washington Academy, in
Cambridge, New York, where his wife Abigail assisted as a teacher.
Elyria, Ohio, and Blissfield, Michigan The manual labor movement gained an enormous boost when
George Washington Gale convinced abolitionist-philanthropists
Arthur and
Lewis Tappan to finance the Society for Promoting Manual Labor in Literary Institutions. In July 1831 the Society hired Monteith's former Hamilton College student
Theodore Dwight Weld as its field agent, who convinced Monteith to come to Elyria, Ohio. Elyria is just nine miles north of
Oberlin College, which would be founded two years after Monteith settled there, in 1833. Indeed, several members of the Finneyite faction of Hamilton College all gathered in the vicinity of Oberlin, where Monteith's former student,
Asa Mahan (Hamilton, 1824), became its first president,
Charles Grandison Finney himself accepted a professorship in 1835 and was the second president, and
John Keep, a former Hamilton trustree, served as president of the board of trustees. Monteith became the principal of the private
Elyria High School in 1832, assisted by his wife. Among the students educated there were
James Fairchild, third president of
Oberlin College and his brother
Edward Henry Fairchild, first president of
Berea College. Soon after arriving in Elyria, Monteith became an ardent abolitionist. On December 4, 1833, he attended the first convention of the
American Anti-Slavery Society at
Philadelphia, led by the Tappan brothers as one of eight Ohio delegates. He was one of the founders of the Western Reserve Anti-Slavery Society, which was formed on the principle of total and immediate emancipation in 1833 and in 1835 was the president of the Lorain County Anti-Slavery Society. According to his son, John Monteith, Jr., "He made no apologies, and used no conciliatory or rhetorical blandishments. He poured out the red facts and hammered them in with his hard faced logic. The whole community came down on him. With the exception of two or three kindred spirits, there was throughout the whole Reserve scarcely a man or woman that dared to be his friend. Persecution started up on every side, and the very air was filled with biting slanders." In 1845, he accepted a call to lead the
First Presbyterian Church in
Blissfield, Michigan. He labored there for ten years, returning to Elyria to live with his married daughter in 1855. On April 5, 1868, at the age of 79, he was laid to rest. His home in
Elyria, Ohio, Monteith Hall, now on the
National Register of Historic Places, was a stop on the
Underground Railroad. ==Historical legacy==