John Longmuir (poet)

Rev Dr John Longmuir LLD (1803–1883) was a versatile Scottish minister and antiquary, known as a poet and lexicographer.

Life

The son of Christian Paterson and John Longmuir, Keeper of the Ruins of Dunnottar Castle and at one time butler at Ury House, Stonehaven, he was born at Fetteresso near Stonehaven, Kincardineshire, on 17 November 1803.

In 1814, his parents moved to Aberdeen. He was educated at Aberdeen Grammar School and then studied at Marischal College. After graduating M.A. he completed his divinity studies. In 1824 he was teaching in Aberdeen, living at 62 Loch Street;[1] he taught for some years in schools at Stonehaven and Forres. The presbytery of Forres licensed him to preach in July 1833.[2]

In 1837, Longmuir was appointed evening lecturer in Trinity Chapel, Aberdeen, and in September 1840 was ordained by the Church of Scotland at the Mariners' Church in Aberdeen. At the Disruption of 1843 he went over with most of his congregation to the Free Church of Scotland.[2] A new Free Mariners Church was built on Commerce Street in 1844. This was renamed Commerce Street Free Church in 1881 when Longmuir retired and was replaced by Rev A. Murray Scott.[3]

Longmuir was for some years lecturer on geology at King's College, Aberdeen, and in 1859 was granted the honorary degree of LL.D.

He retired in 1881 and died at Hawthorn Cottage, 5 Dee Place in Aberdeen on 7 May 1883.[4]

Family

He was twice married, firstly to Lillias Milne in 1835, and secondly to Dorothy Hawthorn Dixon in 1857.[2]

Works

Longmuir's first publication was The College and other Poems (anon., Aberdeen, 1825). The leading poem dealt with the defects of the academic system of the time. Three later volumes of verse were Bible Lays, a collection of original poems (1st. edit. Aberdeen, 1838; 2nd edit. Edinburgh, 1877); Ocean Lays, a compilation, with twenty-five original poems (Edinburgh, 1854); and Lays for the Lambs, forty-two pieces written for the children of his church (Aberdeen, 1860).[2]

He produced two guidebooks, one to Dunnottar Castle (Aberdeen, 1835), many editions; the other to Speyside (Aberdeen, 1860). His Maiden Stone of Bennachie (Aberdeen, 1869), on the Maiden Stone monolith, put a tradition connected with it into verse. In A Run through the Land of Burns and the Covenanters (Aberdeen, 1872) he attacked Mark Napier's attempt to disprove that two female covenanters were drowned at Wigtown, and celebrated the "two Margarets" in verse. His edition of Alexander Ross of Lochlee's Helenore (Edinburgh, 1866) appeared with a life of the author.[2]

Longmuir was also a lexicographer. He edited a combined version of John Walker's and Noah Webster's Dictionaries (London, 1864), and Walker's Rhyming Dictionary (London, 1865), with an introduction on English versification. A revision of John Jamieson's etymological Scottish Dictionary provided his major work. His abridged edition was issued at Aberdeen in 1867, and a complete edition in 4 vols. (Paisley, 1879–82). On the title-page he appears as joint-editor with David Donaldson.[2]

Several of Longmuir's sermons were published separately, generally with an original hymn attached. He was popular as a platform speaker, and successful as a temperance advocate.[2]

References

  1. Aberdeen Post Office Directory 1824
  2. Hadden 1893.
  3. Ewing, William Annals of the Free Church
  4. Aberdeen Post Office Directory 1883

Attribution  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Hadden, James Cuthbert (1893). "Longmuir, John". In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. 34. London: Smith, Elder & Co.

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