James Montgomery (priest)


James Francis Montgomery FRSE was trained as an Anglican priest and served as Dean in St Mary's Episcopal Cathedral in Edinburgh. He is usually referred to as Dean Montgomery. He was an early photographic pioneer and was one of the youngest members of the Edinburgh Calotype Club, one of the world's first photographic societies.

Life

He was born on 10 July 1818, the son of Elizabeth Mason and Robert Montgomery, Lord Treasurers Remembrancer. He would have spent much time in his early life at the family home of Stobo Castle.
He originally studied law and was admitted to the Scottish bar as an advocate in 1840. In the 1840s he is listed as an operational Edinburgh advocate working from 17 Atholl Crescent in the West End, living together with Robert Montgomery.
In the mid-1850s, he had a change of direction and studied divinity at Durham University, graduating with a BA in 1858 before being ordained, and serving as a curate at Puddletown. In 1858 he returned to Edinburgh to serve at St Paul's. He transferred to St Marys Episcopal Cathedral in Edinburgh as a junior incumbent in 1864. He was appointed Dean of Edinburgh in 1873; and Provost of that St Mary’s Episcopal Cathedral in Edinburgh in 1879.
In 1868, he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh for his early photographic experiments, his proposer being Philip Kelland.
He lived close to the cathedral at 17 Atholl Crescent, a large townhouse in Edinburgh's West End.
He died at home on 21 September 1897 and is buried in the northern Victorian extension of Dean Cemetery.

Memorials

A fine recumbent effigy of Montgomery exists on the north side of the choir stalls, sculpted by James Pittendrigh Macgillivray five years after his death.

Family

He married the Hon. Elizabeth Mary Elphinstone on 17 January 1860. A brass plaque to her memory lies in the north aisle of St Marys Episcopal Cathedral. They had no surviving children.

Publications