Daniel Lindley

{{Short description|American missionary in South Africa (1801–1880)}}

{{Infobox person

|name = Daniel Lindley

|image = Daniel Lindley mid age.jpg

|image_size =

|caption = Lindley

|birth_date = {{birth date|1801|8|24}}

|birth_place = Ten Mile Creek, Pennsylvania

|death_date = {{death date and age|1880|9|3|1801|8|24}}

|death_place = Morristown, New Jersey

|known_for =

|education = Ohio University

|occupation = Missionary

|spouse = Lucy Lindley

|children = Eleven

|nationality = American

}}

Daniel Lindley (August 24, 1801 – September 3, 1880) was an American missionary in South Africa. He and his wife Lucy founded the Inanda Seminary School in 1869. Lindley was pastor to the first Dutch Reformed Church in the Orange Free State. He was a pastor to the Voortrekkers.

Description

Lindley was born at Ten Mile Creek, Pennsylvania on 24 August 1801. He was the eldest child of Jacob and Hannah Lindley. His father had founded Ohio University{{cite book|title=Transaction|year=1832|publisher=Medical Society of the State of Pennsylvania|page=333|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=d1_wAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA333}} so not surprisingly Lindley was educated there and at the Union Seminary in Prince Edward, Virginia. In 1831 he was ordained by the Presbyterian Church. On 20 November 1834 he married Lucy Virginia Allen and they were sent by the American Board of Missions to South Africa. His colleagues on board the Burlington were the medical doctors Newton Adams, Alexander Erwin Wilson, three other missionaries and their wives.{{cite journal|title=Mission to Southeastern Africa (in 1835 Annual Report)|journal=The Missionary Herald|date=1835|volume=31|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XcgWAQAAIAAJ|page=5}}

When they arrived in Cape Town they still had {{Convert|1000|mi}} to cover. Their journey in the company of Alexander Wilson, Henry Venable and their wives took a year by ox cart to get to Matabeleland. Lindley together with other missionaries were to work creating converts amongst the Matabele but their plan was thwarted by the fighting that was taking place between the Dutch and the Matebele. They had to retreat to Natal and from there they were driven away again by the fighting between the Boers and the Zulus.

In 1839 Lindley returned and decided that with the Zulus out of reach he should minister to the Boers. He opened a school for their children and was appointed as a pastor. On 31 March 1842, Lindley led the founding congregation of the first Dutch Reformed Church in the Orange Free State.[http://www.sahistory.org.za/dated-event/rev-daniel-lindley-institutes-first-congregation-dutch-reformed-church-orange-free-state First Dutch Reformed Church in the Orange Free State], SAHistory.org.za, accessed 9 August 2013 These institutions were successful and amongst the first to be confirmed was Paul Kruger who was to be the first President of South Africa.

File:Sarah Adams, James Bryant, Mary Elizabeth, Lucy Virginia, Rev. Daniel Lindley etc.jpg

In 1847, Lindley established a station at Inanda, centering his efforts on the Zulus and helping set aside large "native locations" to protect them from land-hungry settlers.

Lindley moved to the Inanda Mission in 1858 with his wife and eleven children. Lindley fired his own bricks to build the mission house which is still standing over 150 years later. The following June Lindley was able to return to the United States. The family returned in October 1862 leaving their third child Sarah behind to take up a position teaching in Rochester, New York. They were away during the American Civil War and whilst they were in Africa their home was razed to the ground.{{cite web|title=The Amazing Sojourn of Lindley's Trunk 14 Feb 2012|url=http://globalministries.org/news/africa/the-amazing-sojourn-of.html|publisher=GlobalMissionaries.org|accessdate=10 August 2013|archive-date=20 July 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140720191144/http://globalministries.org/news/africa/the-amazing-sojourn-of.html|url-status=dead}}

At the Lindleys' retirement in 1873, Zulus and Boers expressed deep regard. The Lindleys retired to the United States in 1874. Lindley died on 3 September 1880 in Morristown, New Jersey. He was buried in the Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in New York.

School for girls

File:Inanda Seminary-Original Building - Edwards Hall, Lucy Lindley Hall behind.jpg

In 1869 they realised that the Adams School at Adams Mission was successfully creating educated Africans but they had no prospect of finding an educated local wife. They said "who are they going to marry? – these naked girls".[https://archive.today/20130815215227/http://wiki.ulwazi.org/index.php5?title=Dumisani_Zondi_-_Educationist_from_Inanda Dumisani Zondi - Educationist from Inanda], ulwazi.org, accessed 15 August 2013 The couple realised this was a problem and founded a school for nineteen girls boarding at Inanda in 1869. The cost of this was borne by the American Missionary Board. The headteacher was brought from Ohio and Mary Kelly Edwards was to serve the school until her death 58 years later.{{cite web|title=Inanda Seminary School|url=http://www.historicschools.org.za/view.asp?ItemID=10&tname=tblComponent2&oname=Schools&pg=front&subm=Pilot%20Schools|publisher=SAHistory,org.za|accessdate=10 August 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131216002424/http://www.historicschools.org.za/view.asp?ItemID=10&tname=tblComponent2&oname=Schools&pg=front&subm=Pilot%20Schools|archive-date=16 December 2013|url-status=dead}}

One of the Lindley daughters went on teach at the school but the Lindley family left in April 1873 leaving the organisation that they had established in the hands of the Reverend James Dube. Dube was the son of one of the first Christians in the area. Dube was to die in 1877 but not before he had fathered John Dube who was to found Ohlange High School and take a leading role in creating the African National Congress. Lindley left Inanda having created what would become Inanda Seminary School, the Seminary, a church and several schools based in native huts.

Legacy

The mission house that Lindley built at the Inanda Mission is still standing and is still used as the main office at the Seminary. Lindley and his wife's major contribution was to establish the school for girls. The Inanda Seminary School is still running and has a good record and noted alumni.

In addition, the town of Lindley in the Free State is named after him. A bridge in Pietermaritzburg was named the Daniel Lindley Bridge in 1967.{{cite web|title=Daniel Lindley|url=http://www.dacb.org/stories/southafrica/lindley_daniel.html|publisher=Dictionary of African Christian Biography|accessdate=10 August 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130531004908/http://dacb.org/stories/southafrica/lindley_daniel.html|archive-date=31 May 2013|url-status=dead}}

References

{{Commons category|Daniel Lindley}}

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{Cite book |last=Davies |first=Horton |author-link=Horton Davies |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/greatsouthafrica0000unse/page/40 |title=Great South African Christians |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1951 |chapter=Daniel Lindley |chapter-url-access=registration}}

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Lindley, Daniel}}

Category:1801 births

Category:1880 deaths

Category:Founders of educational institutions

Category:Protestant missionaries in South Africa

Category:Dutch Reformed Church missionaries

Category:American missionaries in South Africa

Category:American members of the Dutch Reformed Church

Category:Ohio University alumni

Category:Christians from Pennsylvania

Category:Burials at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery