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John Burdett Wittenoom

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Nationality
  
English

Occupation
  
Clergyman Teacher

Name
  
John Wittenoom


John Burdett Wittenoom membersiinetnetauperthdpsgraves07headjpg

Born
  
October 24, 1788
Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire, England

Relatives
  
Frank Wittenoom (grandson) Edward Wittenoom (grandson)

Died
  
January 23, 1855, Perth, Australia

John Burdett Wittenoom (24 October 1788 – 23 January 1855) was a colonial clergyman who was the second Anglican clergyman to perform religious services in the Swan River Colony, Australia, soon after its establishment in 1829.

Contents

Early life

John Burdett Wittenoom was born in England at Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire.

Career

He took up teaching in England. Shortly after his first wife's death, he decided to emigrate to Western Australia arriving on the Wanstead in January 1830 with his mother, sister and four sons.

He singlehandedly conducted services alternately every Sunday at Perth, Guildford and Fremantle until 1836.

In later years, he ran a grammar school and pursued his interest in education. In 1847, he was appointed to the colony's first education committee and was the inaugural chairman for eight years after it became the Board of Education. After his death in 1855, his second wife and daughter took charge of the government girls' school.

Personal life

His first wife died when they were still living in England. Together, they had five sons, including John Burdett, Henry, Frederick Dirck, and Charles. In 1839, he remarried in Australia. His daughter Mary was the mother of Edith Cowan, while another daughter, Augusta, married Thomas Burges (a member of parliament). The progeny of Wittenoom's fifth son, Charles Wittenoom, became notable individuals in the history of Western Australia.

Death

He died on January 23, 1855. A tablet in his memory is in St George's Cathedral, Perth.

References

John Burdett Wittenoom Wikipedia