Samuel Andrew (29 January 1656 – 24 January 1738) was an American Congregational clergyman and educator.

Early life

Samuel was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the eldest child of Samuel and Elizabeth (née White) Andrew. The elder Samuel was a merchant and shipmaster and the master builder of the first Harvard Hall. Elizabeth's step-father, a wealthy Salem merchant named George Curwin, paid for the younger Samuel's education.

He graduated from Harvard College in 1675 and received a master's degree in 1678. He then became a tutor at the college until 1684. He was elected a Fellow of the college in 1679. His students at Harvard included multiple co-founders of Yale (see below) and future Harvard president John Leverett.

Minister in Milford

Reverend Andrew was ordained minister at Milford, Connecticut on 18 November 1685,

He was one of the ministers who assembled at Saybrook in 1708 by order of the General Court for the purpose of adopting and recommending to the churches a manual of church discipline called the "Saybrook Platform". One of the several motivations for the new college was concern over the liberalizing of the Harvard education by Andrew's former student, Leverett.

Andrew had close ties to several of his fellow trustees. Reverend Samuel Mather was his brother-in-law. Reverend Timothy Woodbridge was a college classmate.