James Cuthbert Hadden

James Cuthbert Hadden
Born 9 September 1861
Banchory, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, U.K.
Died 2 May 1914 (aged 52)
Edinburgh, Scotland, U.K.
Pen name J. Cuthbert Hadden
Occupation Writer, journalist, biographer, organist
Nationality Scottish
Genre Non-fiction, biography, music, opera
Spouse Elizabeth Couper Gordon
Children one daughter

J. Cuthbert Hadden (1861–1914) was a prolific Scottish author, journalist, biographer and organist.

Life

Hadden was born in Banchory, Aberdeenshire on 9 September 1861.[1] His father was James Hadden, a general labourer, and his mother was Elizabeth Mathieson.[2] He began his working life as a bookseller's assistant in Aberdeen and afterwards studied music in London while employed in the publishing house of George Routledge & Sons. He entered the musical profession and returned to Aberdeen as an organist. In 1881, he became organist of St Michael's Parish Church, Crieff.[3] In 1886, he married Elizabeth Couper Gordon and they had one daughter. He removed to Edinburgh in 1889, where he abandoned music in favour of literature and his remarkable literary output is shown below. His recreations are listed as 'walking and gardening.'[4] Hadden wrote at least 98 articles for the Dictionary of National Biography, and the list on this page is taken from the following site s:Author:James Cuthbert Hadden though it may not be complete. Articles written by him in the DNB were designated by the initials "J. C. H." He died in Edinburgh on 2 May 1914.

Works

Biographical

Operatic and Other Musical

Boys' Books

Sources

Contributions to the Dictionary of National Biography, 1885–1900

Thomas Willert BealeJohn Tiplady CarrodusNathaniel GowNiel GowGeorge Farquhar GrahamJames HyslopJohn Imlah – William Inglott – Elizabeth Inverarity – James Johnson (d.1811) – William KetheRobert Kirk – William Knapp – Joseph Philip Knight – George Jackson Lambert – John Frederick LampeEdward Land – Richard Langdon – Christian Ignatius Latrobe – John Antes Latrobe (including Peter Latrobe) – James Leach – David Leech – Samuel LeighRichard LimpusHenry Liston – Henry Littleton – John Bernard Logier – John LongmuirCharles Lucas – Thomas Lyle – Thomas Toke Lynch – Agnes LyonHenry Francis LyteJoseph Maas – Hugh Macdonald – Patrick Macdonald – Alexander MacGlashan – Mary Mackellar – James McKie – William McLaren – James Maidment – Joseph Mainzer – Gertrude Elizabeth Mara – John Marckant – John Marsh (1750–1828) – George William Martin – George Martine (1635–1712) – Mary Masters – James Maxwell (1720–1800) – Alfred Mellon – Andrew Mercer – Richard Alfred Milliken – John Milton (1563?–1647) – William Henry Monk – Alexander Monro (d.1715?) – Thomas Moore (d.1792) – John Morison (1750–1798) – Nathaniel Morren – Thomas Molleson Mudie – James Nares – Laurence Cornelius Neilson – Sydney Nelson – Charles Nicholson – John Nicholson (1790–1843) – Richard Nicholson (d.1639) – Charles Nisbet – John Norman (1622–1669) – Thomas Norris – Marianne Nunn – William Orem – John Park (1804–1865) – John Parry (d.1782) – John Parry (1776–1851) – Elizabeth Parsons – Samuel Pearce – Henry Phillips – George Rawson – Joseph ReinagleHenry Brinley Richards – Joseph Richardson – John Ross (1763–1837) – Michael Desmond Ryan – Hew Scott – Andrew Shirrefs – William Shrubsole (1729–1797) – William Shrubsole (1760–1806) – John Sinclair (1791–1857) – Reginald Spofforth – Anne Steele – William Stenhouse – John Andrew Stevenson – John Templeton (1802–1886) – George Thomson (1757–1851) – Thomas Henry Weist-Hill – Thomas Welsh – Alice Mary Meadows White – John Wilson (1800–1849)

References

  1. According to his 'Who was Who' entry, except that the 1861 has been transposed as 1816. As a result, some webpages quote the year of birth as 1816. However, Scottish census records confirm that Hadden was born in 1861.
  2. According to his death certificate, available on the website www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk.
  3. Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2007
  4. Who Was Who entry.

External links