Born in
Griswold, Connecticut, in his childhood, his family moved several times, to
Constantia, New York and also to several locations in Michigan, settling in
Detroit in 1842. In Detroit, he attended
First Congregational Church. In 1850, at the age of 15 he became a schoolteacher in
Romeo, Michigan. The next year he became a bookseller in Chicago. meeting. This became a lifelong personal and professional friendship. He studied for the Congregational ministry at the
Yale Divinity School (1857–1858) and at the
Andover Theological Seminary (1858–1859). His first pastorate was at a Congregationalist church in
Owego, New York from 1859 to 1860. In 1861 he moved to a larger congregation in
Poughkeepsie. except in 1873-1874 when he was literary editor of
The Christian Union. His disgust with the
Henry Ward Beecher Beecher-Tilton Scandal case sent him back to Michigan. Tyler was elected a member of the
American Antiquarian Society in 1879. For much of the 1870s, Andrew Dickson White had been promoting the study of American history at Cornell University, having hired
George Washington Greene, William C. Russell,
Hermann E. Von Holst, and
John Fiske in various roles as visiting professors and lecturers. In 1881, White secured funds for a permanent professorship, and hired his old college friend Tyler. Tyler turned down a competing offer from Columbia University (at double the pay). From 1881 until his death, Tyler was professor of American history and chairman of the
Department of History. This was the first full professorship of American history. In 1881, he was ordained deacon in the
Protestant Episcopal Church and in 1883 priest, but he never undertook regular parochial work. == Work ==