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William Percival Johnson

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Name
  
William Johnson


Died
  
1928, Tanganyika

William Percival Johnson

Books
  
My African Reminiscences, 1875-1895, Nyasa, the Great Water: Being a Description of the Lake and the Life of the People

William Percival Johnson (12 March 1854 in St Helens, Isle of Wight – October 1928 in Liuli, Tanganyika) was an Anglican missionary to Nyasaland. After education at Bedford School (1863-1873) and graduation from University College, Oxford he went to Africa with the Universities' Mission to Central Africa, under Bishop Edward Steere.

William Percival Johnson A HERO MAN THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF WILLIAM PERCIVAL JOHNSON

He translated the Bible into the Likoma Island dialect of Chinyanja, under the title Chikalakala choyera : ndicho Malangano ya Kale ndi Malangano ya Chapano which was published in 1912.

He died at Liuli, Mbinga District, on the shores of what is today the Tanzanian side of Lake Malawi in 1928, the site of the largest mission in the Ruvuma region of Tanzania. He is regarded locally as a saint and there is a "St Johnson's Day" celebrated. Local demands for his canonization were referred by letter to the Lambeth Conference in 1958, where a compromise that he was regarded as "Blessed" was offered. The Anglican Diocese of South West Tanganyika continues to regard Johnson as a saint.

References

William Percival Johnson Wikipedia