Henry Forster Burder

Henry Forster Burder, D.D. (1783–1864) was an English nonconformist minister.

Life

The eldest son of the Rev. George Burder, and brother of Thomas Harrison Burder, he was born 27 November 1783, at Coventry. He was articled in 1798 to a wholesale firm based in Nottingham and London.

In London he attended the Weigh-house Chapel, and decided to devote himself to the ministry. He became a student in Hoxton Academy, and then in 1804 entered the University of Glasgow, where he took his M.A. degree in 1807, and subsequently that of D.D. After his graduation Burder became classical tutor at Wymondley College; he resigned this appointment in 1808. He was (31 October 1811) assistant to the Rev. Samuel Palmer of St. Thomas's Square Congregational Chapel, Hackney, and on Palmer's death was ordained to his pastorate on 2 March 1814. From 1810 he also filled the chair of philosophy and mathematics at Hoxton College, until it moved to Highbury in 1830.

He was chairman of the Congregational Union in 1844. He remained at Hackney till 1852. He delivered on 26 December 1852, and later published, ‘A Pastor's Farewell,’ London, 1853. His congregation presented him with a purse of £1,000, with which a Burder scholarship was founded at New College, London. He then lived in the house of his eldest son at Hatcham Park, where he died 29 December 1864. He is buried at the non-denominational Abney Park Cemetery, in Stoke Newington.

Works

Burder had many sermons printed in collections. His main works were:

Family

Burder was twice married: first, in 1810, to Ann, eldest daughter of Joseph Hardcastle of Hatcham House, New Cross, London, who died in 1827, leaving a daughter and three sons; and secondly, in 1833, to Mary, eldest daughter of the Rev. J. Tayler of Whitlinge, Worcestershire, who died in 1859 and is buried with her husband at Abney Park Cemetery.

References

Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Grant, Arthur Henry (1886). "Burder, Henry Forster". In Stephen, Leslie. Dictionary of National Biography 07. London: Smith, Elder & Co.