About
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Timeline
1844: Born in Ashfield, Massachusetts
1858: Had a day long vigil, vowed to leave farm and be someone in the world
1860: First independent job as a Schoolmaster
1862: Left Ashfield for Williston Academy
1863: Left Williston Academy
1866: Began Junto, literary club
1867: Graduated from Williams College and attended Union Theological Seminary as a divinity student
1868: Studied abroad in Germany
1878: Earned the first Ph.D. in Psychology in America
1882: Left for work at Johns Hopkins University
1887: Founded the first Psychological Journal in America, The American Journal of Psychology
1889: Became President of Clark University
1892: founded the American Psychological Association
1894: founded the Pedagogical Seminary
1904: Wrote a book called Adolescence
1909: Organized the Clark Conference
1917: Founded the Journal of Applied Psychology
1924: Died in Worcester, Massachusetts
1858: Had a day long vigil, vowed to leave farm and be someone in the world
1860: First independent job as a Schoolmaster
1862: Left Ashfield for Williston Academy
1863: Left Williston Academy
1866: Began Junto, literary club
1867: Graduated from Williams College and attended Union Theological Seminary as a divinity student
1868: Studied abroad in Germany
1878: Earned the first Ph.D. in Psychology in America
1882: Left for work at Johns Hopkins University
1887: Founded the first Psychological Journal in America, The American Journal of Psychology
1889: Became President of Clark University
1892: founded the American Psychological Association
1894: founded the Pedagogical Seminary
1904: Wrote a book called Adolescence
1909: Organized the Clark Conference
1917: Founded the Journal of Applied Psychology
1924: Died in Worcester, Massachusetts