Ridgway William Newland


Rev. Ridgway William Newland, frequently spelled "Ridgeway", was an English Congregationalist minister who with his large family emigrated to the young colony of South Australia, where he had a considerable influence in the Encounter Bay district. Many of his descendants were important in the history of the State. He has been called "The father of the South".

History

Newland was the minister of an Independent church of Hanley, in the Staffordshire Potteries region of England, for around 25 years.
He emigrated to South Australia with his wife Martha, née Keeling, and their six children aboard the Sir Charles Forbes, arriving in June 1839.
They settled in the Encounter Bay area, with a number of members of his congregation. He purchased a large property and after considerable effort established a successful farm. He built a church at Port Elliot.
He assisted T. Q. Stow at the opening service of the new Freeman Street chapel in 1840, and again at the opening of the new Franklin Street schoolhouse in January 1845.
He left to visit England early January 1845, perhaps on the Palmyra, and returned aboard the Kingston in January 1846, accompanied by a son.
He died of injuries sustained when the mail coach in which he was travelling capsized and all passengers were thrown out.

Recognition

The first Newland Memorial Church was built in 1868 and extended as the Hodge annexe, replacing the "Tabernacle" built by R. W. Newland.
A new Newland Memorial Church, built on land donated by Henry S. Newland, with a bequest from Simpson Newland, and designed by W. H. Bagot, was erected c. 1930 in his memory.
On 25 December 1838, on the eve of Rev. Newland's departure for Australia, he was presented with a pair of communion cups, still held by the Newland Memorial Church.

Family

Rev. Ridgway William Newland was married twice: to Jane Sophia Benning then to Martha Newland, née Keeling
;with first wife
;with Martha
It is unlikely that Richard Francis Newland was related: he was an Anglican and brother of an Anglican clergyman.