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John Davidson
DESCRIPTION
Last NameDavidsonFirst NameJohnTitleProfessorReverendUnique IDUA-00025362Date of Birth1834Date of Death22 July 1881Biography
John Davidson was born in Kinghorn, Fife, Scotland, son of John Davidson, dominie of Burntisland. He attended the Universities of St Andrews in 1851-55 and Edinburgh in 1855-56 but took no degree. He studied divinity in 1856-58 and 1860-61, became a licentiate of the Free Church Presbytery of Kinross and in 1864 was ordained minister of Langholm, Dumfriesshire.
In 1869 he was called to Adelaide and arrived with his wife and children in the Carnaquheen in June 1870. At Chalmers Church, North Terrace, he was soon 'instrumental in raising his congregation to a high state of prosperity'.
In 1872 Walter Watson Hughes offered £20,000 to Union College, an institution for the education of Presbyterian, Congregational and Baptist ministers. Davidson and others on the college council suggested that the endowment be devoted to founding a university. Hughes agreed and the University Act was passed in 1874. Despite criticism in parliament that he was not a graduate or 'of any great culture' Davidson was appointed the first Hughes professor of English literature and mental and moral philosophy.
With Rev. Henry Read, Hughes professor of classics and philology, he began to conduct classes, although formal academic work did not begin at the university until March 1876. Davidson resigned from Chalmers Church in 1877 but continued to preach on most Sundays at various churches. He was also in constant demand outside the university as a popular lecturer.
He held his chair until he died from a liver complaint at Glenelg on 22 July 1881, aged 47.
Biographical SourceTaken from Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 4, (MUP), 1972