| Founders of the PCEA |
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| Written by Rowland S. Ward | |
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Page 1 of 2 Founding EldersWilliam Buyers and Samuel MartinFrom The Presbyterian Banner: March, 1996. THE Presbyterian Church of Eastern Australia was formed by four men who met at William Buyers' premises at 4 Hunter Street, Sydney. This was the second in a strip of 14 two-storey terraces - shop below and dwelling above - on the north side between George Street and Hamilton Street, and known as Adelaide Place.1 The property formed part of the site later acquired by United Insurance Co. Ltd. It was demolished in the 1880s to make way for United's Head Office building. The painting of the scene in the history by J.C.Robinson, and also that by myself, shows William Buyers and Peter Stewart, as well as the three ministers - William McIntyre, John Tait and Colin Stewart - with Samuel Martin, commissioned elder. William Buyers was a prominent businessman who acted as Sydney agent for the extensive pastoral interests associated with William Mclntyre's wife, Mary. Buyers, along with Peter Stewart, his father in law, had resigned from Thomas Mowbray's congregation in June 1846 over the vacillating policy in the Synod of Australia concerning its relationship to the post-1843 Established Church of Scotland. He was to be treasurer of the new Synod until 1875. One of his daughters married the Rev Peter McPherson (1826-86) in 1886. Peter Stewart (1792-1882) was a building contractor. He had been an elder in Hope Street Church Glasgow prior to coming to Australia in 1838. In 1872 another of his daughters became the second wife of Duncan McInnes, PCEA minister at Maclean (1868-1908). These men were of prominent social standing in their spiritual commitment. Those who constituted the first Synod came from a variety of backgrounds. In the rest of this article we consider the only elder among the four men. SamuelMartin (1809-1889) was born in Ahoghill, County Antrim as was Rachael Leith (1806-69), who became his wife in 1831.2 Samuel became an elder of the Irish church in 1835. The couple arrived in Sydney in October 1838 with their two children, George (1832-1917) and Joseph (1834-98). A female child was born on the voyage out but died just as they reached Sydney. Rachael was for a time in a delicate state of health herself. The family moved to Green Ponds (Morpeth) where Samuel worked on the farm property of P. Rapsey for £30 a year plus rations. He was the only free man on the estate. The convicts assigned to the property were supervised by soldiers and often used the cat o' nine tails on their charges. Many times Rachael washed the blood off the backs of these unfortunate men after they had been flogged. Although it was a common offence to steal washing off the clothes lines, the convicts held her in such respect that they would not steal from her. Fellow Ulsterman, Robert Blain, had ministered at Maitland from 1838 and included Morpeth in his visits. In 1841 he was relocated to Hinton where there was a busy farming settlement embracing also nearby Nelsons Plains. When the Martins moved to Nelsons Plains late in I840 still had Blain's active and faithful ministry, and Samuel was involved as one of the elders. But Blain drew back from his earlier desire to break the link with the Established Church of Scotland and rely on voluntary contributions. Although Blain was respected, Samuel and most of the Highlanders were not prepared to follow his lead. Samuel thus took his Protest against the position of the majority of the Synod of Australia and shared in constituting a new cclesiastical court which would act consistently with its profession of loyalty to Christ. A modest church was built and opened at Ahalton in 1847. Hugh MacDonald (1805-89) took a prominent role in organising the new PCEA congregation, as most of the people were Highlanders, but whether Scots or Ulster people, Gaelic or English-speaking, the cause knew spiritual blessing. At the end of 1854, Rev Allan McIntyre began his ministry on the Manning River. Soon afterwards Martin purchased land in the district, and later moved to a farm at Redbank near Tinonee. This seems to have been before the severe floods of June/August 1857 led to wholesale removals from the Hunter northwards. After Samuel's wife died he moved to the Clarence River to be near his son George (Leith) Martin, who was converted during the spiritual awakening associated with Allan McIntyre's ministry,3 and named his oldest child (born 1864) Allan Mclntyre Martin as a consequence. Samuel was an eider at Grafton from 1878, and died at Dyraabra, Richmond in 1889. Various descendants remain PCEA members to this day. Samuel Martin was a man of faithfulness to Christ, and loyalty to a church built foursquare on the Word of God.
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