Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Henry Scadding

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Henry Scadding

Role
  
Author

Books
  
Toronto of Old


Henry Scadding

Born
  
July 29, 1813 (
1813-07-29
)
Dunkeswell parish, England,

Occupation
  
teacher, Anglican clergyman, and historian

Died
  
May 6, 1901, Toronto, Canada

Education
  
Upper Canada College, St John's College, Cambridge

Henry Scadding (July 29, 1813 – May 6, 1901) was a Canadian author and clergyman.

Scadding was born in Dunkeswell, Devon, England, and migrated to Canada with his parents, John Scadding and Melicent Triggs, in 1821. He was educated at Upper Canada College and at St. John's College at Cambridge University, Cambridge, England, from which he graduated in 1837. He was the first boy enrolled at Upper Canada College and has a Day Boy House named after him there, Scadding's.

In 1838 he was appointed to a tutorship at Upper Canada College and was ordained a priest of the Church of England. On August 14, 1841, he married Harriet Eugenia Baldwin (d. 1843) and they had one daughter, Henrietta Millicent (June 1, 1842 - 1926). In 1847 he became rector of the Church of the Holy Trinity, a post he held until 1875. He was also a canon of St. James' Cathedral.

He edited the Canadian Journal of Science, Literature, and History from 1868 to 1878. He also published many books, including Memorial of the Reverend William Honywood Riply (1849), Shakespeare the Seer—the Interpreter (1864), Truth's Resurrection (1865), Christian Pantheism (1865), Toronto of Old (1873), The Four Decades of York, Upper Canada (1884) and A History of the Old French Fort at Toronto (1887). In his writings Scadding was principally interested in history and religious themes. He was a founder and the first president of the [{York Pioneers]] a Toronto based historical society that preserved Scadding Cabin, a cabin built by his father in the early days of York.

References

Henry Scadding Wikipedia