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George Dawson (preacher)

George Dawson (24 February 1821 – 30 November 1876) was an English nonconformist preacher, lecturer and activist. He was an influential voice in the calls for radical political and social reform in Birmingham, a philosophy that became known as the Civic Gospel.

George Dawson
Personal details
Born(1821-02-24)24 February 1821
Died30 November 1876(1876-11-30) (aged 55)
Kings Norton, Birmingham, England
BuriedKey Hill Cemetery, Birmingham
NationalityEnglish
DenominationNonconformist Christian
EducationMarischal College, Aberdeen
Alma materUniversity of Glasgow

Ministry

 
An engraving of Dawson, c.1852

Dawson was born in Brunswick Square, London, in 1821. His father was headmaster of a Baptist school. He was educated at home, then at Marischal College, Aberdeen, and the University of Glasgow. Oxford and Cambridge seemed not an option as, owing to the Test Act, for centuries up to 1828 only Anglicans were allowed to matriculate (Oxford) or graduate (Cambridge).

In 1843 Dawson accepted a call to the pastorate of the Baptist church at Rickmansworth. He moved to the rapidly expanding industrial town of Birmingham in 1844 to become minister of the Mount Zion Baptist Chapel where the eloquence and beliefs that the young man expressed soon attracted a large following.

 
The Unitarian Church of the Saviour in Edward Street, Birmingham (1847–1895)

However, Dawson's views did not fit the orthodoxy of the Baptist church, so in 1845 he left, followed by much of his congregation, to become minister of the theologically liberal Church of the Saviour, a Unitarian church erected for him by his supporters, where "no pledge was required, of minister or congregation; no form of belief was implied by membership; no difference in creed was allowed to bar union in practical Christian work".

The key doctrine preached there was inscribed on a marble tablet above the entrance: "There is but one law – thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and thy neighbour as thyself."

Civic Gospel

In the Church of the Saviour, Dawson developed the concept of the Civic Gospel. He called upon his congregation to join him in the struggle "to improve conditions in the town and the quality of life enjoyed by its citizens". His sermons were unconventional for the time, it was said that Dawson "preached not as a dying man to dying men – that was the old idea of preaching – but as a living man to living men who found life no simple or easy matter". His sermons electrified the Birmingham public and influential members of his Church included Joseph Chamberlain (who took Sunday School and oversaw the accounts), Jesse Collings, George Dixon, J. A. Langford, Robert Martineau, Samuel Timmins, William Harris, A. F. Osler, and the Kenrick family, all of whom played an important part in local affairs and took on his ideals.[1] Between 1847 and 1867, 17 members of his congregation were elected to the Town Council, six of whom were elected mayor.[2]

From his pulpit and in public lectures and articles, Dawson advised Christians (particularly people experienced in business) to become councillors and help transform the City, a call which Joseph Chamberlain answered in his work first as Councillor, then as a visionary social reforming Mayor. His idea of the civic gospel and his advocacy of free education was strongly supported by the Congregational spokesman Dr. R. W. Dale, and by J. T. Bunce, influential editor of the Birmingham Daily Post. Both Dawson and Dale were disqualified as ministers from seats on the town council, but both served on the Birmingham school board. Dawson strongly advocated to the worshippers in his Church and in Birmingham the idea of service in politics as a civic duty and as service to God.

Dawson's radicalism did not meet with universal approval. A correspondent writing to Aris's Birmingham Gazette in 1847 described him as a person "whose views and proceedings are calculated to produce considerable mischief"; and as "a young man who ... has prided and plumed himself upon more than he possesses and has consequently fallen into great and grievous errors".[3]

Views

 
Bust of Dawson in the Library of Birmingham

Dawson did not consider himself to be a Unitarian, although modern Unitarians count him as one of their own (he is listed by the Midland Unitarian Union as a great nineteenth-century Unitarian).[4] He left the Baptist Church to be free of any definite creed or doctrinal rigidity.

"True Religion", Dawson believed, was "social, unitive, and brotherly in its spirit: it produces the church as its social development". For him, Christianity was "a set of fruitful principles", not a code of laws or a theological dogma.

Other interests

 
Dawson's memorial in Key Hill Cemetery

Dawson was famous during his lifetime for lecturing on a wide range of subjects from Shakespeare to German poetry, Italian history to good etiquette. He became a national figure, in demand as a lecturer throughout the country. Charles Kingsley described him as "the greatest talker in England". Dawson was a friend of Carlyle and Emerson and did a great deal to popularize their teachings, especially in his demand for a high ethical standard in everyday life and his insistence that citizenship needed a specifically Christian approach.

Dawson also lectured on English literature at the Birmingham and Midland Institute and helped to found the Shakespeare Memorial Library in Birmingham. His address at the opening of the Birmingham Reference Library[5] gives a flavour of what the civic gospel meant to the Victorian municipal activists:

The opening of this glorious library, the first fruits of a clear understanding that a great town exists to discharge towards the people of that town the duties that a great nation exists to discharge towards the people of that nation – that a town exists here by the grace of God, that a great town is a solemn organism through which should flow, and in which should be shaped, all the highest, loftiest, and truest ends of man's intellectual and moral nature... We are a Corporation, who have undertaken the highest duty that is possible to us; we have made provision for our people – for all our people – and we have made a provision of God's greatest and best gifts unto Man.

Dawson died suddenly at Kings Norton on 30 November 1876 and was buried in Key Hill Cemetery.

Four volumes of Dawson's Sermons, two of Prayers and two of Biographical Lectures were published after his death.

Personal life

Dawson married Susan Fanny Crompton (1820–1878) in 1846. They had two children, Rachel Annie (1846–1873) and Bernard (1851–1900).[6] Rachel, "from some inexplicable arrest in the bones of her skull at an early age ... was almost an imbecile".[7] Her early death in May 1873 sent Dawson into a temporary fit of depression.

Published biography

Following Dawson's death in 1876, his friend Sam Timmins was asked to write his biography, with additional contributions to be provided by G. J. Johnson, J. D. Morell (a contemporary of Dawson at the University of Glasgow) and J. H. Chamberlain. Timmins began to gather materials, but "it was a long time before any part of his manuscript was sent to the printer's"; and, when it was, it was destroyed in a fire. Timmins lost enthusiasm – "all the eagerness with which he undertook the task had oozed away" – and the work remained unfinished at his death in 1902. The task and materials passed to Wright Wilson (son of Joseph Wilson, another of Dawson's friends) and was eventually published in 1905, including the contributions from Johnson, Morell and Chamberlain, another from Sebastian Evans, and a reprinted newspaper article by David Christie Murray.[8]

 
The statue of George Dawson when in Edmund Street
 
The statue of Dawson now in storage at the Birmingham Museum Collections Centre

Commemoration

A statue of Dawson formerly stood in Victoria Square, Birmingham; and later in Edmund Street, nearby. It is currently in store at Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery's Museum Collections Centre, awaiting restoration and repair.

A bust of Dawson is now on the ninth floor of the Library of Birmingham.

References

  1. ^ Wilson 1905, p. 61.
  2. ^ Wilson 1905, p. 152.
  3. ^ D. (4 October 1847). "[Letter]". Aris's Birmingham Gazette. Quoted in Roberts, Stephen (2015). Now Mr Editor! Letters to the newspapers of nineteenth-century Birmingham. Birmingham Biographies. pp. 57–8. ISBN 978-1518685897.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 1 April 2007.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 30 June 2007. Retrieved 1 April 2007.
  6. ^ Wilson 1905, Genealogical Table.
  7. ^ Wilson 1905, p. 130.
  8. ^ Wilson 1905, "Prefatory note".

Bibliography

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Dawson, George". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 874.
  • Records: Church of the Saviour Founded and built 1847–95; Library of Birmingham (258925; 259532; 260167 George Dawson Collection; 264036).
  • Briggs, Asa (1990) [1963]. Victorian Cities (3rd ed.). London: Penguin Books. ISBN 0140135820.
  • Crosskey, Henry William (1876). The Memory of George Dawson: a discourse delivered in the Church of the Messiah, Birmingham, on the 3rd December, 1876, etc. Birmingham: E. C. Osborne.
  • Dale, A. W. W.; Fairbairn, A. M.; Rogers, J. G. (1899). The Life of R. W. Dale, of Birmingham. London: Hodder and Stoughton.
  • Dale, R. W. (August 1877). "George Dawson: politician, lecturer, and preacher". The Nineteenth Century. 2: 44–61.
  • Hennock, E. P. (1973). Fit and Proper Persons: ideal and reality in nineteenth-century urban government. London: Edward Arnold. ISBN 0-7131-5665-1.
  • Hunt, Tristram (2004). Building Jerusalem: the rise and fall of the Victorian city. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. pp. 232–265. ISBN 0297607677.
  • Marsh, Peter (1994). Joseph Chamberlain: entrepreneur in politics. New Haven, Mass: Yale University Press.
  • Plant, Helen (2000). "Ye are all one in Christ Jesus: aspects of Unitarianism and feminism in Birmingham, c. 1869–90". Women's History Review. 9 (4): 721–42. doi:10.1080/09612020000200533.
  • Sellers, Ian (2013) [2004]. "Dawson, George (1821–1876)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/7347. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Skipp, Victor (1983). "George Dawson and the Civic Gospel". The Making of Victorian Birmingham. Yardley. pp. 153–8. ISBN 0-9506998-3-7.
  • Wilson, William Wright (1905). The Life of George Dawson, M.A. Glasgow (2nd ed.). Birmingham: Percival Jones.

george, dawson, preacher, other, people, named, george, dawson, george, dawson, disambiguation, george, dawson, february, 1821, november, 1876, english, nonconformist, preacher, lecturer, activist, influential, voice, calls, radical, political, social, reform,. For other people named George Dawson see George Dawson disambiguation George Dawson 24 February 1821 30 November 1876 was an English nonconformist preacher lecturer and activist He was an influential voice in the calls for radical political and social reform in Birmingham a philosophy that became known as the Civic Gospel George DawsonPersonal detailsBorn 1821 02 24 24 February 1821London EnglandDied30 November 1876 1876 11 30 aged 55 Kings Norton Birmingham EnglandBuriedKey Hill Cemetery BirminghamNationalityEnglishDenominationNonconformist ChristianEducationMarischal College AberdeenAlma materUniversity of Glasgow Contents 1 Ministry 1 1 Civic Gospel 2 Views 3 Other interests 4 Personal life 5 Published biography 6 Commemoration 7 References 8 BibliographyMinistry Edit An engraving of Dawson c 1852 Dawson was born in Brunswick Square London in 1821 His father was headmaster of a Baptist school He was educated at home then at Marischal College Aberdeen and the University of Glasgow Oxford and Cambridge seemed not an option as owing to the Test Act for centuries up to 1828 only Anglicans were allowed to matriculate Oxford or graduate Cambridge In 1843 Dawson accepted a call to the pastorate of the Baptist church at Rickmansworth He moved to the rapidly expanding industrial town of Birmingham in 1844 to become minister of the Mount Zion Baptist Chapel where the eloquence and beliefs that the young man expressed soon attracted a large following The Unitarian Church of the Saviour in Edward Street Birmingham 1847 1895 However Dawson s views did not fit the orthodoxy of the Baptist church so in 1845 he left followed by much of his congregation to become minister of the theologically liberal Church of the Saviour a Unitarian church erected for him by his supporters where no pledge was required of minister or congregation no form of belief was implied by membership no difference in creed was allowed to bar union in practical Christian work The key doctrine preached there was inscribed on a marble tablet above the entrance There is but one law thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and thy neighbour as thyself Civic Gospel Edit In the Church of the Saviour Dawson developed the concept of the Civic Gospel He called upon his congregation to join him in the struggle to improve conditions in the town and the quality of life enjoyed by its citizens His sermons were unconventional for the time it was said that Dawson preached not as a dying man to dying men that was the old idea of preaching but as a living man to living men who found life no simple or easy matter His sermons electrified the Birmingham public and influential members of his Church included Joseph Chamberlain who took Sunday School and oversaw the accounts Jesse Collings George Dixon J A Langford Robert Martineau Samuel Timmins William Harris A F Osler and the Kenrick family all of whom played an important part in local affairs and took on his ideals 1 Between 1847 and 1867 17 members of his congregation were elected to the Town Council six of whom were elected mayor 2 From his pulpit and in public lectures and articles Dawson advised Christians particularly people experienced in business to become councillors and help transform the City a call which Joseph Chamberlain answered in his work first as Councillor then as a visionary social reforming Mayor His idea of the civic gospel and his advocacy of free education was strongly supported by the Congregational spokesman Dr R W Dale and by J T Bunce influential editor of the Birmingham Daily Post Both Dawson and Dale were disqualified as ministers from seats on the town council but both served on the Birmingham school board Dawson strongly advocated to the worshippers in his Church and in Birmingham the idea of service in politics as a civic duty and as service to God Dawson s radicalism did not meet with universal approval A correspondent writing to Aris s Birmingham Gazette in 1847 described him as a person whose views and proceedings are calculated to produce considerable mischief and as a young man who has prided and plumed himself upon more than he possesses and has consequently fallen into great and grievous errors 3 Views Edit Bust of Dawson in the Library of Birmingham Dawson did not consider himself to be a Unitarian although modern Unitarians count him as one of their own he is listed by the Midland Unitarian Union as a great nineteenth century Unitarian 4 He left the Baptist Church to be free of any definite creed or doctrinal rigidity True Religion Dawson believed was social unitive and brotherly in its spirit it produces the church as its social development For him Christianity was a set of fruitful principles not a code of laws or a theological dogma Other interests Edit Dawson s memorial in Key Hill Cemetery Dawson was famous during his lifetime for lecturing on a wide range of subjects from Shakespeare to German poetry Italian history to good etiquette He became a national figure in demand as a lecturer throughout the country Charles Kingsley described him as the greatest talker in England Dawson was a friend of Carlyle and Emerson and did a great deal to popularize their teachings especially in his demand for a high ethical standard in everyday life and his insistence that citizenship needed a specifically Christian approach Dawson also lectured on English literature at the Birmingham and Midland Institute and helped to found the Shakespeare Memorial Library in Birmingham His address at the opening of the Birmingham Reference Library 5 gives a flavour of what the civic gospel meant to the Victorian municipal activists The opening of this glorious library the first fruits of a clear understanding that a great town exists to discharge towards the people of that town the duties that a great nation exists to discharge towards the people of that nation that a town exists here by the grace of God that a great town is a solemn organism through which should flow and in which should be shaped all the highest loftiest and truest ends of man s intellectual and moral nature We are a Corporation who have undertaken the highest duty that is possible to us we have made provision for our people for all our people and we have made a provision of God s greatest and best gifts unto Man Dawson died suddenly at Kings Norton on 30 November 1876 and was buried in Key Hill Cemetery Four volumes of Dawson s Sermons two of Prayers and two of Biographical Lectures were published after his death Personal life EditDawson married Susan Fanny Crompton 1820 1878 in 1846 They had two children Rachel Annie 1846 1873 and Bernard 1851 1900 6 Rachel from some inexplicable arrest in the bones of her skull at an early age was almost an imbecile 7 Her early death in May 1873 sent Dawson into a temporary fit of depression Published biography EditFollowing Dawson s death in 1876 his friend Sam Timmins was asked to write his biography with additional contributions to be provided by G J Johnson J D Morell a contemporary of Dawson at the University of Glasgow and J H Chamberlain Timmins began to gather materials but it was a long time before any part of his manuscript was sent to the printer s and when it was it was destroyed in a fire Timmins lost enthusiasm all the eagerness with which he undertook the task had oozed away and the work remained unfinished at his death in 1902 The task and materials passed to Wright Wilson son of Joseph Wilson another of Dawson s friends and was eventually published in 1905 including the contributions from Johnson Morell and Chamberlain another from Sebastian Evans and a reprinted newspaper article by David Christie Murray 8 The statue of George Dawson when in Edmund Street The statue of Dawson now in storage at the Birmingham Museum Collections CentreCommemoration EditA statue of Dawson formerly stood in Victoria Square Birmingham and later in Edmund Street nearby It is currently in store at Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery s Museum Collections Centre awaiting restoration and repair A bust of Dawson is now on the ninth floor of the Library of Birmingham References Edit Wilson 1905 p 61 Wilson 1905 p 152 D 4 October 1847 Letter Aris s Birmingham Gazette Quoted in Roberts Stephen 2015 Now Mr Editor Letters to the newspapers of nineteenth century Birmingham Birmingham Biographies pp 57 8 ISBN 978 1518685897 Midland Union Our History Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 1 April 2007 The first Birmingham Central Library Archived from the original on 30 June 2007 Retrieved 1 April 2007 Wilson 1905 Genealogical Table Wilson 1905 p 130 Wilson 1905 Prefatory note Bibliography Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Dawson George Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 874 Records Church of the Saviour Founded and built 1847 95 Library of Birmingham 258925 259532 260167 George Dawson Collection 264036 Briggs Asa 1990 1963 Victorian Cities 3rd ed London Penguin Books ISBN 0140135820 Crosskey Henry William 1876 The Memory of George Dawson a discourse delivered in the Church of the Messiah Birmingham on the 3rd December 1876 etc Birmingham E C Osborne Dale A W W Fairbairn A M Rogers J G 1899 The Life of R W Dale of Birmingham London Hodder and Stoughton Dale R W August 1877 George Dawson politician lecturer and preacher The Nineteenth Century 2 44 61 Hennock E P 1973 Fit and Proper Persons ideal and reality in nineteenth century urban government London Edward Arnold ISBN 0 7131 5665 1 Hunt Tristram 2004 Building Jerusalem the rise and fall of the Victorian city London Weidenfeld and Nicolson pp 232 265 ISBN 0297607677 Marsh Peter 1994 Joseph Chamberlain entrepreneur in politics New Haven Mass Yale University Press Plant Helen 2000 Ye are all one in Christ Jesus aspects of Unitarianism and feminism in Birmingham c 1869 90 Women s History Review 9 4 721 42 doi 10 1080 09612020000200533 Sellers Ian 2013 2004 Dawson George 1821 1876 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 7347 Subscription or UK public library membership required Skipp Victor 1983 George Dawson and the Civic Gospel The Making of Victorian Birmingham Yardley pp 153 8 ISBN 0 9506998 3 7 Wilson William Wright 1905 The Life of George Dawson M A Glasgow 2nd ed Birmingham Percival Jones Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Dawson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Dawson preacher amp oldid 1106771086, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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