David Ker


David Ker, born in northern Ireland, was a minister, educator, lawyer and judge, the first presiding professor of the University of North Carolina.

Early life

David Ker was born in February 1758 in Downpatrick, Ireland. He was of Scottish ancestry.
He graduated from Trinity College in Dublin.
Ker became a Presbyterian minister with the Temple Patrick Presbytery. and married Mary. Ker emigrated with his family to the United States in the 1780s and was recorded in Orange County, North Carolina by 1789, when their son was born there.

Career

In 1791, Ker served as a Presbyerian minister in Fayetteville, North Carolina. He was a schoolteacher on weekdays and gave sermons in the courthouse on Sundays.
Ker moved to Chapel Hill, North Carolina in 1794, where he served as the first presiding professor of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He resigned two years later, in 1796, after arguing with the trustees and students. Indeed, the trustees had tried to demote him to Professor of Languages, but he refused. After it became evident that they wouldn't budge, he decided to leave.
Ker moved to Lumberton, North Carolina. He served as the first president of an academy founded by John Willis, a Brigadier General in the American Revolutionary War who owned a large plantation in Lumberton, in the 1790s. Meanwhile, he passed the Bar exam.
Ker moved to Natchez, Mississippi with John Willis in 1800. He established the first public school for women in the Mississippi Territory. His wife and daughters taught at the school. Shortly after, he became the Sheriff and Clerk of the Court of Adams County, Mississippi. Two years later, in 1802, he was made a judge of the Mississippi Supreme Court by President Thomas Jefferson, replacing Judge Daniel Tilton.

Personal life

Ker married a woman named Mary. They had five children:
Ker died on January 21, 1805 in Natchez, Mississippi. His widow burned all his papers after his death, fearing they might inappropriately influence others. Ker's portrait is preserved at the Southern Historical Collection of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.