Jump to content

William McClure Thomson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from W.M. Thomson)
William Thomson
Portrait of Dr. W. M. Thomson
Born
William McClure Thomson

(1806-12-31)December 31, 1806
DiedApril 8, 1894(1894-04-08) (aged 87)
NationalityAmerican
Other namesأبو طنجرة (Abu Tanjera)
Alma mater
OccupationMissionary
Known forEstablishing the American University of Beirut (formerly the Syrian Protestant College)

William McClure Thomson (31 December 1806 – 8 April 1894) was an American Protestant missionary who worked in Ottoman Syria. After spending 25 years in Syria, he published a bestselling book that described his experiences and observations during his travels. He used his knowledge of the region to illustrate and explain passages from the Bible, giving readers a new perspective on the scriptures.[1][2][3]

Career

[edit]

Thomson was the son of a Presbyterian minister. He was a graduate of Miami University, Ohio.

When he arrived in Beirut on February 24, 1833, he was only the eighth American Protestant missionary to arrive in the region. Two of his predecessors had died, and two had been recalled. In April 1834, Thomson was in Jaffa when a revolt broke out, and he was unable to return to Jerusalem until Ibrahim Pasha recaptured the city with 12,000 troops. While he was away, his wife had given birth to a son, but she died just 12 days after he returned.[4][5]

After his wife's death, Thomson relocated to Beirut with his young son. There, in 1835, with Rev. Story Hebard, he established a boarding school for boys. In August 1840, Thomson and other American missionaries were evacuated from Beirut by the USS Cyane, and witnessed the bombardment of the city by a coalition of British, Austrian, and Turkish naval forces under the command of Charles Napier. The bombardment, which lasted for one month, forced Pasha's army to retreat. Meanwhile, a conflict broke out between the Druze and Maronite communities in Lebanon. In 1843, Thomson and Cornelius Van Alen Van Dyck founded a boys seminary in Abeih, Lebanon. Two years later, in 1845, a new outbreak of violence occurred, and Thomson once again played a role in negotiating a truce. He remained in Sidon until 1857, when he returned to America for two years.

In 1860 full scale civil war broke out in Lebanon. The conflict lasted 60 days and spread to Damascus. Thomson supervised the distribution of £30,000 of money, food and clothing amongst the thousands of destitute refugees. At a Beirut Mission Meeting on 23 January 1862, he proposed the establishment of a college with Daniel Bliss as its president. The Syrian Protestant College was established in 1866 with 16 students. This college evolved into the American University of Beirut.[4] Theophilus Waldmeier's autobiography states that it was on Thomson's advice, in 1873, that Waldmeier established Brummana High School.[5]

His local nickname became Abu Tangera—father of the cooking pot—after his broad-rimmed hat. With his local knowledge, he was used as a dragoman by several Biblical scholars. In 1852, he accompanied one of the founders of modern Biblical archeology, Edward Robinson on his second tour of the Holy Land.[6]
[7]

The Land and the Book

[edit]

In 1859, Thomson published a book entitled "The Land and the Book," which described his experiences in the Middle East. The book was aimed at a general audience rather than an academic or theological one, and it quickly became very popular. In the United States, it was only outsold by "Uncle Tom's Cabin," an abolitionist novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe, over the following 40 years.[8]

The book is framed around a pilgrimage undertaken during 1857. Thomson is accompanied by an unnamed individual whose questions enable the author to recount his experiences and illustrate stories from the Bible. They set out from Beirut in January, riding south to Sidon and Tyre, from where they cut inland and arrived in Palestine via the Hula Valley. They visited Safad, Tiberias, Nazareth and Jenin before returning to the coast at Caesarea and south to Jaffa, Ashdod and Gaza. From Gaza, they turned north via Bayt Jibrin, Hebron and Bethlehem, ending the journey in Jerusalem. In the book he gives lengthy accounts of two memorable events. He was one of the first outsiders to arrive at Safad following the devastating 1837 earthquake, and in June 1839 he presided over the funeral of Lady Hester Stanhope. Many of the illustrations in the book are by his son, William Hanna Thomson.[9]

The naturalist Henry Baker Tristram, author of A Natural History of the Bible, used Thomson's book as his guide during his own exploration of Palestine. At the turn of the century English writer H. Rider Haggard covered a similar itinerary. When he landed at Haifa, his party had difficulty hiring horses because of a nationwide shortage caused by the arrival of a party of 500 Americans on a tour of the Holy Land.[8]

Frontispiece from an 1872 edition of Land and the Book – Bethlehem.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Parfitt, Tudor (1987) The Jews in Palestine 1800–1882. Boydell Press. ISBN 0-86193-209-9. p.64
  2. ^ Shepherd, Naomi (1987) The Zealous Intruders - Western Rediscovery of Palestine. Collins. ISBN 0-00-217432-4. p. 90
  3. ^ Dodge, Bayard (1958) The American University of Beirut - A brief history. Khayat's Beirut.
  4. ^ a b Dodge. p.12
  5. ^ a b Greenwood, John Ormerod (1978) Quaker Encounters. Volume 3. Whispers of Truth. Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust, York. ISBN 0-900657-42-1 p.95
  6. ^ Shepherd, p. 90
  7. ^ Parfitt. p.64
  8. ^ a b Haggard, H. Rider (1904) A winter Pilgrimage. Being an account of travels through Palestine, Italy, and the island of Cyprus, accomplished in the year 1900. Longmans, Green and Co. 1908 edition.
  9. ^ Thomson. p.xv