John Davidson (minister)

John Davidson (1834 – 22 July 1881) was a Presbyterian minister and academic.[1]

Life

Davidson was born in Kinghorn, Fife, Scotland,[1] and was educated for the ministry.[2] Having gained a considerable reputation as a preacher, he was invited to assume the pastorate of Chalmers Church in Adelaide.[2] Accepting the call, he arrived in South Australia in June 1870, and was connected with Chalmers Church until 1877, when he associated himself with the Adelaide Union College. When Sir Walter Watson Hughes agreed to endow the University of Adelaide with £20,000 for two professorships, he stipulated that Davidson should fill the first chair of English Language and Literature and Mental and Moral Philosophy.[2] Accordingly, when the University was constituted, in 1874, Davidson assumed the duties of the position. He died on 22 July 1881.

Family

Davidson left a widow Harriet (1839–1883), the daughter of Hugh Miller the geologist, known as a poet and writer; she died at Adelaide in December 1883. She was the author of Isabel Jardine's History (1867), Christian Osborn's Friends (1869), and contributed to the Adelaide newspapers and Chambers's Journal.[2][3]

gollark: Er, you need me to issue a key with perms for one.
gollark: Again, that is SPUDNET's role, though that basically just works by requiring a key rather than fancy crypto things.
gollark: No, doing that properly would require many tricky cryptography things.
gollark: The GTech trilaterator array just listens on the 128 channels most recently, er, transmitted on, as obtained by the Anavrins VLA.
gollark: SPUDNET is more suitable for that.

References

  1. Walker, R. B. "Davidson, John (1834–1881)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Melbourne University Press. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 8 December 2013 via National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  2. Mennell, Philip (1892). "Davidson, Rev. John" . The Dictionary of Australasian Biography. London: Hutchinson & Co via Wikisource.
  3. Catherine Helen Spence (2005). Ever Yours, C.H. Spence: Catherine Helen Spence's An Autobiography (1825-1910), Diary (1894) and Some Correspondence (1894-1910). Wakefield Press. p. 115 note 24. ISBN 978-1-86254-656-1.
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