John Fullerton Cleland Explained

John Fullerton Cleland (1821 – 29 November 1901) was a Protestant Christian missionary who served with the London Missionary Society during the late Qing Dynasty China.[1] He emigrated to South Australia, where he and his wife founded a family of considerable influence.

History

Cleland was born in Edinburgh the only son of barrister William Lennox Cleland (c. 1798–1832) and Henrietta Cleland, née Fullerton, who married in 1816.

W. Lennox Cleland, who had a practice in Calcutta, drowned in the Hooghly River and his widow married again in 1836, to Dr. Thomas Glen (died 1844). John Fullerton Cleland's sister Margaret Fraser Cleland married (later Sir) Samuel Davenport and emigrated to South Australia in 1843. Thomas Glen's sons George and Tom also emigrated to South Australia aboard Templar in 1845 and joined the Davenports in Macclesfield. George married Bishop Short's daughter Millecent, for whom the town of Millicent was (mis)named. Henrietta emigrated to South Australia aboard Yatala in 1868 and lived in some style at "Ferndale", Beaumont.On leaving school Cleland joined the East India Company as a midshipman aboard Reliance. He left the Company for service with the London and Counties Bank; Reliance was wrecked near Boulogne in November 1842, shortly after.[2] He married Thomas Glen's daughter Elizabeth in 1845 and they went out to China as missionaries. Their first two children, William Lennox and Margaret Henrietta were born in Hong Kong in 1847 and 1848, and son John was born in Canton in 1850.Then Cleland suffered sunstroke, and the family returned to England and settled in Taunton, where George Fullerton Cleland was born in 1852.[3] They then left for South Australia aboard Gloucester, arriving in August 1852,[4] and settled in a prefabricated home brought out from India by Edward Gleeson on a property dubbed "Gleeville", at 1 Dashwood Road, Beaumont. The two older children died in 1854 after suffering scarlet fever followed by dropsy. They had five more children, all boys.

Cleland was appointed Registrar of Births, Marriages and Deaths in 1853, and held the position until 1885, when he resigned at the request of the Government, to be replaced by Dr. H. T. Whittell.[5] Elizabeth died on 4 November 1895; he died on 29 November 1901 and was survived by six sons:

Family

The Hahndorf Walkers Beaumont Press, Adelaide 1983

The Clelands of Beaumont Beaumont Press, Adelaide 1986

Beaumont House: The land and its people Beaumont Press, Adelaide 1993

The Beaumont Clelands were distantly related to Professor Sir John Cleland FRS (1835–1925) of University of Glasgow (the Professor and William Lennox Cleland had the same great-grandfather)[3]

John Cleland (13 November 1848 – 23 August 1936), Northern Territory pioneer and hero of the SS Gothenburg shipwreck was not a close relative.

Sources

. Alfred James Broomhall . 1982 . Hudson Taylor and China's Open Century: Barbarians at the Gates . Hodder and Stoughton . London.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ancient Family of Cleland; being an account of the Clelands of that Ilk, in the county of Lanark; of the branches of Faskine, Monkland, etc.; and of others of the name. Cleland. John Burton. 1905. Internet Archive. Hicks. 49. 18 October 2015. London.
  2. News: Personal . . XLIV . 13,454 . South Australia . 30 November 1901 . 28 February 2017 . 6 . National Library of Australia.
  3. Elizabeth Simpson (1986), The Clelands of Beaumont Beaumont Press, Adelaide
  4. News: Shipping Intelligence . . I . 80 . South Australia . 16 August 1852 . 28 February 2017 . 2 . National Library of Australia.
  5. News: Registrar-General Births and Deaths . . XLIII . 2313 . South Australia . 30 January 1886 . 28 February 2017 . 39 . National Library of Australia.
  6. News: Family Notices . . XI . 3270 . South Australia . 9 April 1869 . 26 January 2021 . 2 . Trove.