David Bogue

David Bogue

Nonconformist Preacher
Born 1750 (1750)
Coldingham, Berwickshire, Scotland
Died 1825 (1826)
Brighton, England

David Bogue (18 February 1750 – 25 October 1825[1]) was a British nonconformist leader.

Life

He was born in the parish of Coldingham, Berwickshire, Scotland. After a course of study in Edinburgh, he was licensed to preach by the Church of Scotland, but made his way to London in 1771, to teach in schools at Edmonton, Hampstead and Camberwell. In 1777, he settled as minister of the Congregational church at Gosport in Hampshire, where he also took charge of an institution for preparing men for the ministry.

It was the age of the new-born missionary enterprise, and Bogue's academy was largely the seed from which the London Missionary Society grew. Bogue himself would have gone to India in 1796 if not for the opposition of the East India Company. In 1824 he taught Samuel Dyer at Gosport before he left for Penang as a missionary with the London Missionary Society.

He was also involved in founding the British and Foreign Bible Society and the Religious Tract Society, and in conjunction with James Bennett, minister at Romsey, wrote a well-known History of Dissenters (3 vols., 1809). Another of his writings was an Essay on the Divine Authority of the New Testament. He died at Brighton.

References

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 

Notes