John Roxburgh (minister) explained

Type:minister
John Roxburgh
Birth Date:8 March 1806
Death Date:2 November 1880

John Roxburgh (1806–1880) was a Scottish minister of the Church of Scotland and later of the Free Church of Scotland. He served as the latter denomination's Moderator of the General Assembly in 1866 or 1867.

Life

He was born on 8 March 1806 the son of Archibald Roxburgh (1773–1823), a Glasgow shipping merchant, and his wife, Elizabeth Clark (1777–1813). In 1820 he was living with his father at 21 Charlotte Street in Glasgow, his mother having died.[1]

He studied Divinity at Glasgow University, graduating with an M.A. in 1828 and was licensed to preach by the Glasgow Presbytery of the Church of Scotland in 1831. He then did mission work in Manchester before returning to do mission work in St David's Parish in Glasgow then in Barony parish.[2]

He was ordained at St John's Church in Dundee in 1834. In 1836, due to great expansion, his parish was split to create a new quoad sacra church called St Peters.[3]

He left the established church in the Disruption of 1843 and joined the Free Church of Scotland, as minister of Free St John's, Dundee, 1843-1847. In 1847 he moved to the newly completed St John's Free Church near George Square, Glasgow, designed by John Thomas Rochead.[4] He was admitted to Free St John's, Glasgow, 18 May 1847.

In 1849 he received an honorary doctorate (DD) on 1 May 1849 from Glasgow University.[5] In 1850 he was living at 6 Provanside in central Glasgow.[6]

From 1857 to 1863 he was Convenor of the Home Missions Committee for the Free Church. From 1866 he was assisted at St John's Free by Rev Alexander Whyte. In 1866 he was elected Moderator of the General Assembly (Scott says 23 May 1867).[7]

He lived his final years at 122 Hill Street, a fine Georgian villa in the Garnethill district of Glasgow.[8] He died at his son's house in Weston-super-Mare on 2 November 1880.[9]

St John's Free Church was demolished in 1971.

Bibliography

Family

On 7 June 1836 he married his cousin, Catherine Grey (1811-1899), daughter of George Gray of Yeaman Shore, Dundee, Esq. (1750-1835) and his wife, Catherine Balfour of Kilmany (1773-1833).

They had at least ten children but only six lived to adulthood:[10]

Roxburgh was also the great-uncle of writer, Catherine Carswell (nee Catherine Roxburgh Macfarlane, born 27 March 1879), whom he christened.[11]

Artistic recognition

He was photographed by Hill & Adamson in 1844.[12]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Glasgow Post Office Directory 1820
  2. Ewing, William Annals of the Free Church
  3. Parliamentary Papers 1836 vol.24
  4. Web site: TheGlasgowStory: St John's Free Church. www.theglasgowstory.com.
  5. Free Church Monthly December 1880
  6. Glasgow Post Office Directory 1850
  7. Ewings Annals of the Free Church
  8. Glasgow Post Office Directory 1880
  9. Free Church Monthly; December 1880
  10. Web site: Rev John Roxburgh. geni_family_tree.
  11. Book: Pilditch, Jan . Catherine Carswell: a Biography . John Donald . 2007 . 9780859766852 . Edinburgh . 3.
  12. Web site: Rev. Dr John Roxburgh, 1806 - 1880. Of Dundee; Moderator of the Free Church Assembly. National Galleries of Scotland.