Difference between revisions of "John Clarke"

From historywiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Bot: Automated import of articles)
 
(Bot: Automated import of articles *** existing text overwritten ***)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
'''John Clarke'''
 
{{Infobox rai-fellow
 
{{Infobox rai-fellow
 
| first_name        = John
 
| first_name        = John
Line 15: Line 16:
 
| elected_LAS        =  
 
| elected_LAS        =  
 
| membership        = ESL Corresponding Fellow  
 
| membership        = ESL Corresponding Fellow  
| left              =  
+
| left              = not on any printed lists
 
| clubs              =  
 
| clubs              =  
 
| societies          =  
 
| societies          =  

Revision as of 08:53, 28 May 2020

John Clarke

Revd.
John Clarke
File:Clarke, John.jpg
Born 1802
Died 1879
Residence Savanna La Mar Jamaica
Occupation church
academic
Society Membership
membership ESL Corresponding Fellow
left not on any printed lists
elected_ESL 1855.03.07



Notes

Office Notes

House Notes

Rev., ethnological linguist

Notes From Elsewhere

As an advance party, the Reverend John Clarke (1802-1879), a BMS missionary to Jamaica and George K. Prince (d. 1865), a medical doctor and former slave owner, sailed for West Africa. On January 1, 1841 they arrived at Clarence on the island of Fernando Po. This was to have been a stopping-off point en route to the Nigerian interior, but Clarke and Prince received a warm reception from the head of the British naval squadron. Freed slaves and other black immigrants pleaded for the establishment of a Christian presence. Clarke and Prince advised that the BMS respond positively, thus providing a catalyst for an undertaking that ended in 1858 when the BMS transferred its base to Cameroon.

Publications

External Publications

House Publications

on some drawings from Sierra Leone [assuming it is this mr clarke]

Related Material Details

RAI Material

MS 4 A vocabulary or dictionary of the Fernandian tongue, 1854
MS 5 African dialects, Fernando Po, 1841

Other Material

drawings in Anthropological Society Album at PRM