Early life
Dexter Edgar Converse was born in Swanton, Vermont to Louisa Twichell and Olin Converse, a wool manufacturer. Olin Converse was a descendant of Edward Convers, an early Puritan settler in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, who landed in Salem, Massachusetts in 1629 as part of the John Winthrop Fleet. After his father's death in 1832, Dexter was raised by an uncle in Quebec who was also a woolen manufacturer. When he was twenty-one, Converse went to work at a mill in Cohoes, New York with another uncle, Winslow Twichell, and while there married a cousin, Helen Twichell.Move to North Carolina
In 1854 the Converses moved to Lincolnton, North Carolina to run a mill there, but moved to Bivingsville (nowPhilanthropy and death
In 1891 the Converses left Glendale and moved to Spartanburg, where in 1889 the Converses co-founded the women's college which became Converse College. The campus had a Twichell Auditorium, which was named for his in-laws. Converse died in 1899, and "he was buried in front of Main Hall, as he had requested. Later Helen Converse had her husband's body re-interred in nearby Oakwood Cemetery. Founder's Monument was placed just inside the main entrance to the college."''Converse College'' by Jeffrey R. Willis (2001), pg 8.) His house, the Bivings-Converse House remains inReferences
{{DEFAULTSORT:Converse, Dexter Edgar 1829 births 1899 deaths Philanthropists from Vermont Philanthropists from South Carolina Converse University alumni University and college founders People from Swanton (town), Vermont People of Vermont in the American Civil War People of South Carolina in the American Civil War American Civil War industrialists American chief executives 19th-century American philanthropists