Edwin W. Smith


The Reverend Edwin William Smith FRAI was a Primitive Methodist missionary, anthropologist and author who was born in South Africa, studied at Elmfield College from 1888, and then worked in Africa. The scholar of African Christian history, Adrian Hastings refers to 1925–1950 as "the age of Edwin Smith".

Life

He was born at Aliwal North, South Africa, on 7 September 1876. His parents were missionaries of the Primitive Methodist Connexion. His father, John Smith, went to Aliwal North in 1874 and spent ten of the next fourteen years there. Returning to London, he became secretary of the Primitive Methodist Missionary Society in the 1890s and president of the Primitive Methodist Conference in 1898.
In 1899 he married Julia, daughter of James Fitch of Peasenhall, Suffolk. He served in Africa as a missionary of the Primitive Methodist Church, 1898–1915.

Major works

Archival materials on Smith are to be found in three locations:
  • The Methodist Missionary Society Archives, the School of Oriental and African Studies, London. These items include diaries, translation work, journalistic material, photograph albums, and some unpublished material.
  • Bible Society Archives, Cambridge, England. These items include diaries and reports for India, 1938–39, correspondence, and drafts of John 1–6 in Basic and Simplified English.
  • In the Hartford Seminary Archives, Hartford, Connecticut.

Works About Edwin W. Smith

  • McVeigh, M. God in Africa: Conceptions of God in African Traditional Religion and Christianity. Cape Cod, Mass.: Claude Starke, 1974.
  • Peel, J. D. Y. "Edwin Williams Smith." In Dictionary of National Biography, Missing Persons. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1993.
  • Young, W. John. "Edwin Smith: Pioneer Explorer in African Christian Theology." Epworth Review, 1993, pp. 80–88.
  • -----. The Integrative Vision of a Pioneer Africanist, Edwin W. Smith. M.A. thesis, Univ. of Bristol, July 1997.
  • -----. "The Legacy of Edwin W. Smith." International Bulletin of Missionary Research 25.3 : 126–130.
  • -----. The Quiet Wise Spirit: Edwin W. Smith and Africa. Norwich: Epworth Press, 2002.