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J. W. R. Campbell

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Joseph William Robert Campbell (1853–1935) was an Irish Methodist minister and schoolteacher. He was born in Clough, near Newtownbutler, County Fermanagh. He graduated from Queen's College, Belfast in 1875 with a second-class honours degree in natural science, and later gained an M.A. He entered ministry in 1876. He taught at Methodist College Belfast, and was president there from 1908 to 1920. In 1891 he was elected a member of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland. He was secretary of the Irish Methodists' "Home Mission". In 1900 he represented the Irish church at the British Methodist Connexion. In 1899, he was one of five treasurers of the Irish Methodists' Twentieth Century Fund. The Methodist Church in Ireland Act 1915 appointed him one of 36 trustees of the church. He was a Commissioner of Education in Ireland and Dean of Residences at Queen's University, Belfast. He was a member of the short-lived Senate of Southern Ireland of 1921–22. He married Elizabeth in 1880/1; they had eight children.

Sources

Citations

  1. ^ Lee, Henry (1920). "Heads of the Family in Scotland — Notable Campbells of the British Empire". History of the Campbell family. New York: Polk. pp. 138–9.
  2. ^ Cole & Crookshank, p.130
  3. Queen's University calendar. Alexander Thom. 1875. p. 97. Retrieved 16 February 2011.
  4. ^ Minutes 157th Conference, p.554
  5. Egan, Alexander (30 July 1908). "Irish Letter". The Christian Advocate. 83. Hunt & Eaton: 1277.
  6. Harte, F. E. (1920). "Irish Letter". The Christian Advocate. 95. Hunt & Eaton: 993.
  7. "Members of the Society". Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland. 27 (VII, 5th series) (1). Dublin: Dublin University Press: 19. 1897.
  8. ^ Minutes 157th Conference, p.417
  9. ^ Cooney 2001, p.93
  10. Whyte, Nicholas (2003). "The Senate of Southern Ireland, 1921". Northern Ireland elections. Access Research Knowledge. Archived from the original on 10 June 2011. Retrieved 8 March 2004.
  11. "Residents of a house 97.2 in University Road (Windsor Ward, Antrim)". 1911 Census of Ireland. National Archives of Ireland. Retrieved 16 February 2011.


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