George Hadow

George Hadow (4 July 1712 11 September 1780) was professor of Hebrew and oriental languages at St Mary's College, University of St Andrews, Scotland from 1748 to 1780. He was the son of Principal James Hadow, also of St Andrews' University.[1]

Life

At the age of 15 Hadow won the Silver arrow for archery at St Andrews. It is inscribed "Georguis Hadow Aetat XV" and "Nec opinato Victor 1727". The latter confirms he was the unexpected winner of the competition.

Hadow was educated at the University of St Andrews, where he "came up" in 1727 and matriculated on the 26 March 1728. He received his Master of Arts on the 4 May 1731 and his M.D. on the 20 June 1740. He married Susanna Scott on the 30 December 1754. Susanna Scott was the great grand daughter of Sir Archibald Hope. He died at St Andrews, Fife, Scotland.

A small portrait of George Hadow is in a private collection in England.

Notable descendants

gollark: What did gods ever do for us?
gollark: I don't think refusing to subject some arbitrary subset of your beliefs to inquiry is very good.
gollark: It's not really a useful theory though. It makes no testable predictions.
gollark: Wouldn't you need unreasonably large amounts of trees/person to make that work?
gollark: I mean, yes, you *could* get a better one, but they could also be terrible and you couldn't do anything.

References

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