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STOW, THOMAS QUINTON (1801-1862), pioneer clergyman,
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was born at Hadleigh, Suffolk, England, on 7 July, 180l. He studied for the
Congregational ministry at the missionary college, Gosport, and was given a
charge at Huntingford, Hertfordshire. He was transferred to Halstead in Essex,
and in 1833 published a volume the Memoirs of R. Taylor, LL.D. Another
work, The Scope of Piety, appeared in 1836. In 1837 the Colonial
Missionary Society in connexion with the Congregational body in England sent him
to South Australia. He arrived at Adelaide on the Hartley in October. He
began holding services in a tent but shortly afterwards, partly with his own
hands, built the first church in South Australia. It was constructed of pine
logs thatched with reeds and stood in North Terrace. In 1840 a more substantial
church was built in Freeman-street, and there Stow worked for many years. He
also for a time taught a school at the corner of Freeman- and Pirie-strects. In
1848-9 he fought strongly in opposition to state aid for religion. His health,
however, declined and in 1855 he found it necessary to have an assistant. About
two years later he had to give up his charge, but continned to preach and work
for his church as much as his health would allow. In February 1862, hoping that
a change of climate might be good for him, he went to Sydney to supply the
pulpit in the Pitt-street Congregational church, and in March became so ill that
it was impossible for him to be taken back to Adelaide. He died at the house of
John
Fairfax (q.v.) on 19 July 1862.
Stow was a man of much ability and great honesty of purpose. He was a ready
and efficient speaker, with a sense of humour and a turn for satire that was
never ill-natured. He did much to form the character of the growing settlement,
and this was fully appreciated at the time; twice he was given substantial
pecuniary testimonials to which men of all sects contributed. The Stow Church at
Adelaide stands as a memorial of him. He was married in England and brought his
wife, who survived him, and four sons with him. Of his sons, Randolph
Isham Stow is noticed separately. Other sons were Augustine Stow, who was a
member of parliament for several years between 1863 and 1871, and entering the
public service became chief clerk in the South Australian supreme court; and
Jefferson Pickman Stow who went to the Northern Territory in 1864 and sailed in
a ship's boat from Adam Bay in the Northern Territory to Champion Bay in Western
Australia. He published an account of this voyage as a pamphlet in 1865,
Voyage of the Forlorn Hope, and Notes on Western Australia. He was
afterwards for a time editor of the South Australian Advertiser and was
the author of South Australia, its History Productions and Natural
Resources, published by the South Australian government in 1883, second
edition, 1884.
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