Thomas Burns (New Zealand)
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Thomas Burns (ca. 1796–1871) was a prominent early European settler and religious leader of the province of Otago, New Zealand.
Burns was baptised at Mauchline, Ayrshire, Scotland in April 1796, the son of estate manager Gilbert Burns, who was the brother of the poet Robert Burns. In his childhood Thomas attended Haddington Grammar School and then the University of Edinburgh, where he studied theology. In 1826, he was ordained as minister of the parish of Ballantrae, and in 1830 married Clementina Grant, the daughter of an episcopal minister in Edinburgh. The couple lived in Monkton, where Clementina's uncle had been Presbyterian minister.[1]
At the age of 47, Burns joined the Free Church secession from the Church of Scotland. The proposal for a Free Church settlement in New Zealand gained Burns's interest, and he was offered the position of minister of the New Edinburgh scheme (later the Otago scheme) in June 1843. Burns and William Cargill established a lay association to promote the settlement in May 1845.[1]
On 27 November 1847, Burns and 239 settlers sailed on the Philip Laing from Greenock, among them his wife, five daughters, and one son. The arrived at the new settlement of Dunedin on 15 April 1848. A firm and devout churchman, he also possessed farming skills from his childhood upbringing, and as such, he was a strict but practical man in the early days of the new settlement.
Burns created a strong Presbyterian church as a cornerstone of the new settlement. He presided over the setting up of the Synod of Otago and Southland in 1866, and established the presbyteries of Dunedin, Clutha and Southland. A strong supporter of education, he helped establish both Otago Boys' High School and Otago Girls' High School during the 1870s, and was on the founding committee of the University of Otago,[2][3] of which he was first Chancellor from 1869 until his death on January 23, 1871. His wife Clementina survived him by seven years.[1]
[edit] References
- ^ a b c Dictionary of New Zealand Biography
- ^ King, Michael (2003). Penguin History of New Zealand, page 209. ISBN 0143018671.
- ^ Morrell, W.P. (1969) The University of Otago: A centennial history. Dunedin: University of Otago Press, pp 6-10.