Alexander Haldane (15 October 1800 – 19 July 1882) was a Scottish barrister and newspaper proprietor. He was known as a religious controversialist and evangelical of the Church of England.[1]
Haldane is best remembered as the chief proprietor of The Record, the campaigning evangelical newspaper he helped found in 1828.[10] It began publication in January 1828, but almost immediately financial troubles arose. Haldane was with a lay evangelical group that rescued it later in the year. From that point, to his death in 1881, he wrote most of the paper's editorials. The line taken was a strident Calvinistic evangelicalism: Tory, anti-Catholic, opposed to Broad Church thinking and the left.[11]
The Record gave its name to the "Recordite" faction of evangelicals in the Church of England. By the 1830s their characteristic views were represented in Parliament and proposed legislation.[12]
The term "Recordite" itself was brought to wide attention by William John Conybeare in the Edinburgh Review for October 1853, who derided the position attached to it as a dogmatisation and rigidification of evangelical practices. Haldane's Record returned the compliment the following month, describing Conybeare as "a brummagem Sydney Smith."
Associations
Haldane was a personal friend and close adviser of the social reformer Lord Ashley, in later life 7th Earl of Shaftesbury.[1] An extensive correspondence between them began in 1849.[13] In 1850 Edward Bickersteth, an intimate evangelical friend of Ashley, died. Subsequently Ashley, who had kept the views of The Record at arms length, had more time for them.[14]
He supported the Open Air Mission of John MacGregor, sitting on its committee.[15]
Works
Two letters ... containing statements about concealment and mutilation in the pamphlet of Anglicanus[16] From the Apocrypha Controversy, during which Alexander Haldane, at the request of his uncle Robert, sat on the Committee of the British and Foreign Bible Society.[17] This and other pamphlets were addressed to the Rev. Andrew Brandram, secretary of the Society.
Answer to the statement of the Edinburgh Corresponding Board; more especially as it relates to the concealment and mutilation of documents by the Earl Street Committee, and to Dr. L. Van Ess (1828)[18]
A Letter to the Committee of the Bradford Bible Society: Relative to Certain Misrepresentations Made by the Rev. Andrew Brandram, in His Late Visit to Bradford (1829)[19]
Memoirs of the Lives of Robert Haldane of Airthrey: And of His Brother, James Alexander Haldane (1854)[20]