Hugh Watt (12 December 1879 – 5 September 1968) was a Scottish minister and historian. He served as Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in 1950.[1] He was president of the Scottish Church History Society 1938 to 1941.
Life
editHe was born on 12 December 1879 at Knocklandside near Kilmaurs in Ayrshire, the son of John Watt (1849–1930) and his wife Agnes Taylor Dickie.[2]
He is thought[by whom?] to have studied divinity at Glasgow University and was living in the Bearsden district in 1914 with his wife and first child.
In 1919 he was appointed professor of church history at New College, Edinburgh. He became principal of the college in 1946 and retired in 1950.[3]
He succeeded Very Rev George Simpson Duncan as moderator in 1950 and in turn was succeeded by Very Rev William White Anderson in 1951.
Family
editAround 1910 Watt married Mary Smith Taylor, and they had three children. His daughter Nancy Watt became one of the first female elders of the Church of Scotland in 1967.[6]
Publications
edit- New College, Edinburgh: A Centenary History (1946)
- Representative Churchmen of Twenty Centuries
- Thomas Chalmers and the Disruption
- John Knox in Controversy
- Recalling the Scottish Covenants (1946)
References
edit- ^ "Moderators of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland genealogy project". geni_family_tree.
- ^ [1][dead link ]
- ^ Burleigh, John H. S. (9 July 1968). "In memoriam: Very Rev Principal (emeritus) Hugh Watt". SCHS – via Internet Archive.
- ^ ."Obituary. Dr Hugh Watt: former Principal of New College". The Glasgow Herald. 6 September 1968. p. 11. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
- ^ "The Moderators".
- ^ "The Moderators". www.mayfieldsalisbury.org.