John Thomas Twining Explained

John Thomas Twining (14 May 1793 – 8 November 1860) was a protestant minister in Nova Scotia.[1] Twining served as principal of King’s College School in Windsor, Nova Scotia (1815-1817). He also served as a curate to John Inglis at St. Paul's Church (Halifax) (1817).[2] Twining also became the headmaster of Halifax Grammar School (1819). He became the lifelong sinecure of the chaplain to the House of Assembly (1825). Twining fell out of favour with Inglis and was barred from entering the pulpits of parish churches. He held garrison services at 11 different buildings between 1817 and when a garrison chapel opened in 1846.[3] He was a chaplain and educator for the garrison for the last 14 years of his life.

Works

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Biography – TWINING, JOHN THOMAS – Volume VIII (1851-1860) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography.
  2. R. V. Harris, The Church of Saint Paul in Halifax, Nova Scotia: 1749–1949 (Toronto, 1949)
  3. Judith Fingard, The Anglican design in loyalist Nova Scotia, 1783–1816(London, 1972)