The Geauga Seminary at Chester, Ohio, was small, but its
size did not lessen the school's impact on Garfield. He studied
hard to master algebra, grammar, philosophy, and the Classics,
and joined a debate team. While at school, Garfield also met Lucretia
Randolph, whom he would later marry. Garfield attended the seminary
for a year, after which he searched for a teaching job of his own.
He eventually found a job teaching for the Solon Township near his
hometown of Orange, but the job search proved to be such a trial
for Garfield that he resolved in his journal never to ask for a
job again.
Garfield taught for one semester in Solon before he returned
to the seminary to study Latin, algebra and botany. In the spring
of 1850, Garfield delivered his first public address, a six-minute
oration at the end of the school year. After spending a summer
working as a carpenter, Garfield started studying Greek while working mornings
and Saturdays. The school's deep seminary roots also began to awaken
in Garfield an interest in religion. The area had originally been
settled by a New England congregation and retained much of its
religious flavor. The seminary had been founded by Baptists to
train ministers, and in February 1850, W.A. Little, one of the founding
ministers of the Disciples Church, preached at the school. Little's
sermon enthralled Garfield, who was baptized into the Disciples
shortly thereafter.
The Disciples were a small church, although they were
the largest American- founded religious movement in the United States.
An amalgamation of the practices of the Presbyterians, the Congregationalists
and the Puritans, the Disciples felt that there should be no division
between the faiths of the Christian church. Garfield became deeply
involved with the Disciples and even began to preach around the
Ohio area. He was never ordained, but he performed weddings and
baptisms, and ministered at funerals. Garfield eventually decided,
however, that the life of a minister did not interest him and had
mostly given up preaching by 1860.
The church grew at such a rate that its elders decided
that it needed a school of higher learning, and consequently established the
Western Reserve Eclectic Institute at Hiram, Ohio, near one of the
church's largest congregations. The Institute proved an excellent
way for the church to spread its message. In the fall of 1851, Garfield
enrolled in the Institute. There, Garfield continued his study
of Greek and Latin and began studying geometry; he was one of the
best- educated students at the school. The school's tuition was too
expensive for his family to afford, however, and Garfield petitioned
the school board to allow him to work off part of it. In the mornings,
Garfield rang the school bell, and in the afternoon, he took out
the trash. During the winters, Garfield rose early to start the
fires and keep the school warm.
Garfield's easy-going nature and moral fiber made him
one of the most popular students in the school. Classmates recalled
his "brilliant" jokes. Garfield worked hard, writing in his journal
that "If at any time I began to flag in my effort to master a subjectI
was stimulated to further effort by the thought, 'Some other fellow
in the class will probably master it.'"