Francis Wayland writes much on the subject on education in his Notes on the Principles and Practices of Baptist Churches. I doubt any would view him as anti-education. He evidently favors ministerial education in a formal way, under proper constraints. Yet he contradicts what some seem to be saying today. Here's a snip from pages 35-36.
"It will be said, in answer to my remarks in the last number, that men so illiterate would not be tolerated in any pulpit at the present day. The mass of the people are well taught in our common schools, and they would be repelled from such uncouth ministrations. There is undoubted force in this objection, until we consider all the facts in the case...
Suffer me to illustrate my meaning by relating an anecdote. I happened to be present at a great meeting a short time since, assembled to deliberate on the subject of ministerial education. Among the speakers was a learned brother, who urged the absolute necessity of the most advanced education for every candidate for the ministry, and, as it seemed to some, spoke rather sneeringly of those who entered upon the work of a clergyman without the most extended acquisitions. He enforced his argument by mentioning the fact, that he had lately overheard some boatmen, on a canal-boat, discussing some of the latest theories in geology, and using them as arguments against the authenticity of revelation. He found himself in want of the knowledge which these common men possessed, and felt obliged to burnish up, and enlarge his knowledge of physical science. The argument seemed conclusive, until a plain brother rising, asked the question, 'Where did these boatmen gain this knowledge?' Here was a learned man, deep in Latin, Greek, German, and metaphysics, ignorant of what was known by common boatmen."