John Philip (missionary)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Part of a series on Protestant missions to Africa |
|
Robert Moffat | |
Background |
|
People |
|
Missionary agencies |
|
Pivotal events |
Dr John Philip (14 April 1775-27 August 1851), was a missionary in South Africa. Philip was born at Kirkcaldy, Fife, Scotland to a local schoolmaster. After starting as an apprentice to a linen draper in Leven, and working as a clerk in Dundee, he entered the Wesleyan theological college at Hoxton, and in 1804 was appointed minister of the first Scottish Congregational chapel in Aberdeen. He married Jane Ross in 1809.
[edit] South Africa
In 1818 Philip joined the delegation headed by Rev. John Campbell to investigate the threatened closure of London Missionary Society's stations in South Africa and reported that the conduct of the Cape Colonists towards the indigenous people was deserving of strong reprobation. In 1822 Philip was appointed superintendent of the London Missionary Society's stations in South African. It was the period of the agitation for the abolition of slavery in England, where Philip's charges against the colonists and the colonial government found powerful support. In 1823 he went back to England to lobby for the indigenous and coloured people's civil rights. His recommendations were adopted by the House of Commons, but his unpopularity in South Africa grew. The British government, however, forced the Cape government to conform to the views of Philip and the ordinance of 1828 was passed granting all free coloured persons at the Cape every right to which any other British subjects were entitled.
In 1834, Sir Benjamin d'Urban became governor and was anxious to promote the interests of the indigenous people. After the annexing of land north of the Great Kei River, Philip returned to England, in 1836, in the company of two converted christians, Andries Stoffels, a Coloured South African, and Jan or Dyani Tzatoe (Tshatshu) a [Xhosa, and James Read Sr and James Read Jr, both missionaries, who gave evidence before a parliamentary committee and aroused public opinion against the Cape government. D'Urban was dismissed by Charles Grant, 1st Baron Glenelg, the colonial secretary on the 1 May 1937. Philip returned to the Cape as unofficial adviser to the government on all matters affecting the indigenous people of Southern Africa. His wife, Jane, died in 1847. In 1849 Philip severed his connexion with politics after the annexation of the Griqua lands and retired to the mission station at Hankey, Cape Colony, where he died in 1851.
The town of Philippolis is named after John Philip.
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.