The life and work of Thomas Haweis (1734-1820)
dc.contributor.author
Wood, Arthur Skevington
en
dc.date.accessioned
2019-02-15T14:27:35Z
dc.date.available
2019-02-15T14:27:35Z
dc.date.issued
1951
dc.description.abstract
en
dc.description.abstract
Thomas Haweis has received scant notice from the historians of the eighteenth religious revival in England. His is a
neglected name amongst the Evangelicals. There is, of course,
an abundant literature surrounding the recognized leaders of the
awakening - John and Charles Wesley, George Whitefield, Howell
Harris, the Countess of Huntingdon. Eull length biographies
have also been accorded to many of the secondary figures, such
as William Srimshaw, James Hervey, John Newton, William Romaine,
Henry Venn, and Samuel Walker, to list only a few. But some
there be that have no memorial. Their names have lapsed into
unmerited oblivion. Thomas Haweis belongs to this group of forgotten men. He remains unhonoured and unsung. Ho worthy record
of his life and labours has ever been produced. The longest
memoir extends to a bare thirty-eight pages in John Morison's
The Fathers and Founders of the London Missionary Society,
and, in keeping with the object of that work, confines itself
mainly to Haweis' endeavours to promote the cause of overseas
missions. Of Thomas Haweis the Evangelical practically nothing
has been written. An adequate account of his life and work is
thus an obvious desideratum.
en
dc.description.abstract
Fortunately a considerable amount of new material relating to Haweis has recently been made available. William Jay,
the famous Independent preacher of Bath, lamented the fact that
Haweis' diary could not be consulted after the death of its author,
for it "would have thrown much light on the earlier periods and events of the revival of religion in our own country". He himself wished to use it in preparing a "biography of
Haweis. Permission, however, was refused "by Haweis' son, the
Rev. J.O.W. Haweis, M.A., Rector of Slaugham, Sussex, and later
a Canon of Chichester, who was somewhat ashamed of his father's
Evangelical associations. Writing in 1840, John Campbell, in
his Maritime Discovery and Christian Missions, expressed his
view that " a debt of sacred justice 11 still remained to be discharged to the memory of Haweis, and added:
en
dc.description.abstract
"The responsibility of performing this duty is the more
strongly felt from the circumstance that the memorials of
his life are in the course of preparation by the pen of a
Churchman; and from the experience we have had in the respective cases of Rowland Hill, William Wilberforce and Hannah
More, there is ground to fear that a record will be issued
which the Doctor himself would have felt to be, on points of
great moment, a libel and a wrong, and have perused with indignation and tears!"
en
dc.description.abstract
This biography was never published, and the intended author remains unidentified. Possibly the veto of the incipient Canon
effectively suppressed the project. Whatever the circumstances
may have been, no life of Haweis was ever produced, nor did the
manuscripts so jealously guarded by anti-Evangelical prejudice
become available to a would-be biographer until 1947, when the
bulk of them were purchased by the Mitchell library, Sydney, Mew
South Wales, where they are now housed. Amongst these invaluable
documents is an unfinished Autobiography, begun in 1796 and finally revised in 1815, which covers the years 1734 to 1796. From
1796 until 1818 there are intermittent entries in a Diary, intended as a supplement to the Autobiography. In addition, there
are eighty-two autograph letters written by Haweis to such recipients as the Countess of Huntingdon, Lady Anne Erskine, Sir
Charles Middleton (later Lord Barham), Sir James Wright, Lord
Dundas, George Burder, William Alers Hankey, Joseph Hardcastle,
George Hodgson, John Newton and Matthew Wilks; and seventy-two
letters to Haweis from George Burder, John Eyre, Samuel Greatheed,
Joseph Hardcastle, Christian Ignatius Latrobe, Samuel
Marsden, William Romaine, Ambrose Serle, and others. Numerous
papers and notes are also included in this fascinating collection, which has been microfilmed for the purposes of the present
thesis.
en
dc.description.abstract
Besides the Sydney manuscripts, the following letters
represent further primary material: twenty-six letters from Haweis to Sir Joseph Banks, in the Sutro Library, San Erancisco:
twenty-three letters from John Newton to Haweis in the custody
of Messrs. Maggs, Bros., Ltd., London: one letter of Haweis to
Thomas Charles, one letter of Lady Huntingdon to Haweis and nineteen letters from Lady Anne Erskine to Haweis in the National
Library of Wales, Aberystwyth: twenty-four letters from Haweis
to various correspondents, including J.T. Vanderkemp, and ten
letters to Haweis from J.T, Vanderkemp, William Edwards and Sir
Evan Nepean, in the Library of the London Missionary Society:
two letters of Haweis to unspecified recipients in the Lamplough
Collection: and one letter of Thomas Coke to Haweis in the possession of the Wesley Historical Society of America. It will readily
be seen that these manuscript sources, together with his
thirty-six publications and the information about him that can be
gleaned from contemporary books, pamphlets and periodicals, provide an ample basis for a comprehensive treatment of Thomas newels' life and work.
en
dc.description.abstract
This study, however, does not claim to be an exhaustive
biography. The available matter is too extensive to be compressed satisfactorily within the usual compass of an academic
thesis. It is not possible to supply more than a rapid sketch
of Haweis as an Evangelical and a missionary pioneer. The approach is primarily historical. An attempt is made to cover Haweis'
life chronologically. It has been felt advisable to pay
more attention to that part of his career which has been least
publicized. Thomas Haweis the missionary agitator is not an altogether unknown quantity: the standard histories of the London
Missionary Society by Ellis and Lovett have traversed this ground
with reasonable adequacy, and the chief preoccupation of the chapters dealing with this period is with the new light shed upon it
by the manuscript sources. On the other hand, Thomas Haweis the
Evangelical is only a shadowy figure as yet. Particular notice
has therefore been given to the years prior to his missionary endeavours. His training under Samuel Walker and George Conon, his
indebtedness to Joseph Jane, his formation of a religious society
at the University of Oxford, his Evangelical preaching at St.
Mary Magdalene, Oxford, and his subsequent expulsion, his witness
in the metropolis and his Chaplaincy of the Lock Hospital, his Evangelical stand in his Aldwincle parish, his itinerancy for
Lady Huntingdon, his position in her Connection, his friendships
with John Newton, Henry Venn, William Romaine, Martin Madan,
Thomas Wills, George Burnett, Joseph Townsend, James Stillingfleet,
Matthew Powrley, William Talhot, Legh Richmond - these are
little known features of his life which afford fresh insight into the progress of Evangelicalism. It is one of the aims of
this thesis to secure a sharper focus on the Evangelical party
to which Haweis belonged, and care is taken, mainly by means of
references, collected at the end of the work, to supply accurate
information regarding the personalities of a segment of the Revival all too sparsely documented as yet.
en
dc.description.abstract
Haweis' writings are not dealt with in great detail, although, of course, they must needs be noted in a study of this
nature. Haweis was not a thinker of the first rank. His gifts
were practical rather than theological or speculative. His life
is more significant than his works, and his works are of greatest
interest when related to his life. It is primarily from this aspect that they will be considered. Although nothing Haweis wrote
is indispensable, some of his literary products retain a relevancy for the modern reader. His Biblical Commentary and New
Testament translation have some hermeneutical value. His hymns
and tunes still live on, and his sermons reflect the style and
content of contemporary Evangelical preaching. His Church History, despite its many defects, is noteworthy for its unusual
purpose, shared by Joseph Milner, of tracing the true, spiritual viiand
Evangelical Church amidst the manifold historical distortions of primitive Christianity. Haweis' defence of the Calvinistic
interpretation of the Articles, liturgy and Homilies against the attacks of Bishop Tomline reveals him as an able controversialist. His Communion manual affords additional evidence
to support the growing realization that the Evangelicals were
not so indifferent to worship and the Sacraments as has "been
supposed, and that G.W.E. Russell was justified in describing
Evangelicalism as preparing the way for the Oxford Movement in
a positive manner. These more important works of Haweis
will be examined in their setting and some assessment of their
merits essayed.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/34503
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2019 Block 22
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dc.relation.isreferencedby
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dc.title
The life and work of Thomas Haweis (1734-1820)
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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