Frank Hume Lyal PATON

PATON, Frank Hume Lyal

Service Numbers: Not yet discovered
Enlisted: 11 July 1918
Last Rank: Captain (Chaplain 4th Class)
Last Unit: Australian Army Chaplains' Department
Born: Aniwa, New Hebrides, Vanuatu, 26 August 1870
Home Town: Kew, Boroondara, Victoria
Schooling: Scotch College Melbourne
Occupation: Presbyterian Minister of Religion
Died: Deepdene, Vic., 28 September 1938, aged 68 years, cause of death not yet discovered
Cemetery: Burwood General Cemetery, Victoria, Australia
Memorials: Canterbury State School No 3572 Honour Roll, Kew War Memorial
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World War 1 Service

11 Jul 1918: Enlisted AIF WW1, Captain (Chaplain 4th Class)
23 Jul 1918: Involvement Australian Army Chaplains' Department, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '1' embarkation_place: Melbourne embarkation_ship: HMAT Marathon embarkation_ship_number: A74 public_note: ''
23 Jul 1918: Embarked Australian Army Chaplains' Department, HMAT Marathon, Melbourne

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Biography

Born 26 August 1870 at Aniwa, New Hebrides, Vanuatu
Son of Rev. John Gibston PATON and Margaret nee WHITECROSS
​Husband of Mrs. C S PATON
Of 99 Cotham Road, Kew, Vic.
Aged 47 years
Educated Scotch College, Melbourne
Enlisted 11 July 1918
Returned to Australia 10 June 1919
Died on 28 September 1938 at Deepdene
Buried in Burwood cemetery.

Francis Hume Lyall (Frank) Paton (1870-1938), Presbyterian missionary and theologian, was born on 26 August 1870 on the island of Aniwa in the New Hebrides (Vanuatu), third son of Rev. John Gibson Paton and his second wife Margaret, née Whitecross. Frank grew up in the shadow of his famous and controversial father and wished to emulate him. He attended Scotch College, Melbourne, and received his theological education at Ormond College and the University of Glasgow. He graduated from the University of Melbourne (M.A., 1892) and from St Andrews (B.D., 1896). He also received some training at Bonn where the loss of a close friend in 1889 inspired his first publication, George L. F. Macfadyen, M.A.: A 'Faithful Student'. Soon afterwards he was invited to go to the New Hebrides as the first missionary provided by the John G. Paton Mission Fund, raised from voluntary contributions forwarded by readers of his father's autobiography.

On 19 February 1896 at the Lutheran Church, Germantown, Geelong, Paton married Clara Sophie, sister of Rev. Johannes Heyer. They served at Lenakel on the west coast of Tanna from 1896 until 1902 when Paton's health broke down. Paton described those years in Lomai of Lenakel (London, 1903), republished in 1908 as The Triumph of the Gospel in the New Hebrides. In 1898-1902 he published several translations, including the New Testament, and compiled an English/Lenakel dictionary.

In 1902 Paton was appointed organizing secretary of the board of missions of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Australia. The work proved too arduous for him and in 1904 he became Presbyterian minister at Dunolly. In 1907, following an operation and his recovery, he was appointed foreign mission secretary of the Presbyterian Church of Victoria, a position which he held until 1925. As the Paton representative he put great energy into his new role, taking over the leadership of the personal movement which had formed around his father (d.1907). He travelled extensively through Australia, Britain and the mission fields. His visits to Japan and Korea, reported in a series of pamphlets, were particularly significant in promoting interest in the Japanese Christian leader Kagawa, and in replacing the New Hebrides with Korea as the main theatre of Victorian Presbyterian missionary activity.

Retaining a close interest in Pacific affairs, Paton took a more moderate line than his father on issues such as the labour trade and French influence, in Quarterly Jottings from the New Hebrides, the magazine of the Paton mission fund, and in several pamphlets. He led the campaign to end the Anglo-French condominium, organizing in 1923 a petition of 40,000 signatures to the Australian government. His popular history of missions, The Kingdom in the Pacific, was published in 1913. No doubt inspired by the example of his own mother, Paton was one of the first missionary apologists to publicly recognize the 'unspeakably heroic' service of women in the mission field. He also promoted the Australian Inland Mission.

Paton served overseas as a chaplain with the Australian Imperial Force in 1918-19. In 1922-23 he was moderator of the Presbyterian Church of Victoria. He was an active promoter of the laymen's missionary movement and the student volunteer movement, publishing The Message of the Student Movement, The Supreme Quest (1934) and contributions to church manuals and periodicals.

Paton was essentially a popularizer, putting into practice or promoting the ideas of his father and particular Evangelical heroes, among them D. L. Moody, Henry Drummond and John R. Mott. The quality of 'discipleship' was particularly evident in the books and articles which he published while mission secretary. John G. Paton: Later Years and Farewell (London, 1910) (written with A. K. Langridge), was a pious testimonial to his father, while Patteson of Melanesia (London [1930]) was confessedly hagiographic.

In 1925-36 Paton served as minister of Deepdene Presbyterian church while remaining a director of the mission fund. He died on 28 September 1938 at Deepdene and was buried in Burwood cemetery. His wife, two sons and three daughters survived him. His eldest son was legal scholar Sir George Whitecross Paton, vice-chancellor of the University of Melbourne. Other family members to give distinguished service to the Presbyterian church and mission field included his brothers Robert, Frederick James, M.B.E., and James; his son John Kennedy and daughter Clara Margaret; his nephews John Gillam and Wilfred.

http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/paton-francis-hume-lyall-frank-7976

 

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