Alexander Webster (ca. 1707-1784) | ||
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BiographyAlexander Webster. (ca. 1707-1784) (aka. Mr. Webster) Son of James Webster (1659-1720) and Agnes Menzies, dau of Alexander Menzies of Culterallers. Married (1737) to Mary Erskine. Father of James Webster. Sometime minister of Haddington and Culross. Minister of Tolbooth Kirk in Edinburgh (1737-?). Sometime moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. D.D. from Edinburgh University (1760). Sometime Dean of the Chapel Royal, and one of His Majesty's Chaplains in Ordinary for Scotland. He also directed the first census of Scotland in 1755. In his autobiography, Alexander Carlyle gives the following description of Webster: "Webster had justly obtained much respect amongst the clergy, and all ranks, indeed, for having established the Widows' Fund; for though Dr. Wallace, who was an able mathematician, had made the calculations, Webster had the merit of carrying the scheme into execution. Having married a lady of fashion, who had a fortune of £4,000 (an estate in those days), he kept better company than most of the clergy. His appearance of great strictness in religion, to which he was bred under his father, who was a very popular minister of the Tolbooth Church, not acting in restraint of his convivial humor, he was held to be excellent company, even by those of dissolute manners; while, being a five-bottle man, he could lay them all under the table. This had [brought] on him the nickname of Dr. Bonum Magnum in the time of faction; but never being indecently the worse of liquor, and a love of claret to any degree not being reckoned in those days a sin in Scotland, all his excesses were pardoned."1 Only a few of Webster's writings were published, most notably the Calculations, with the Principles and Data on Which They Are Instituted (1748)2, about "his pioneering actuarial scheme for the Church of Scotland which was to have considerable influence on insurance companies for at least 150 years". Life with James Boswell:
Webster was married to Boswell's aunt, Mary, lived in Edinburgh, and had a son (James) of about Boswell's age, so it is safe to presume, that Boswell had known the household since childhood. The first mention of Webster in Boswell's journals is, when on October 27, 1762, he dined at Webster's place. He described him as "a man of great talents - little literature, but great application to business. He is vivacious and loves society and is very jolly and merry over a bottle." Literature:Webster's Calculations, with the Principles and Data on Which They Are Instituted (1748) is a rarity, but is sometimes available via the Abebooks
Note 1: In Autobiography of the Rev. Dr. Alexander Carlyle, Minister of Inveresk: Containing Memorials of the Men and Events of His Time (Read it now!), p. 195 Note 2: With the amazing subtitle Relative to A Late Act of Parliament, Intituled, An Act for Raising and Establishing A Fund for A Provision for the Widows and Children of the Ministers of the Church, and of the Heads, Principals, and Masters of the Universities of Scotland Shewing the Rise and Progress of the Fund Published by Order of the Trustees Nominated in the Said Act of Parliament.
This article was last updated at January 30 2008 22:51:48 CET Other links of possible interest
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Other biographies that refer to Alexander Webster: Erskine, Mary
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