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Robert Milligan

Robert Milligan (1814–1875) was an American preacher, educator, and author whose ministry within the Disciples of Christ profoundly influenced the Restoration Movement during the 19th century. Born on July 25, 1814, in County Tyrone, Ireland, he immigrated with his parents, John and Margaret Milligan, to Trumbull County, Ohio, around 1818. A childhood injury sustained while clearing farmland redirected his path from manual labor to education and ministry. Largely self-taught in his early years, he attended academies in Zelienople and Jamestown, Pennsylvania, before enrolling at Washington College in Pennsylvania, earning a B.A. in 1840 and later an M.A. in 1843. Converted in 1838 after studying the Greek New Testament, he rejected his family’s Associate Presbyterian roots to join the Disciples of Christ, embracing their call for biblical unity. In 1842, he married Ellen Blaine Russell, who remained his steadfast partner until his death. Milligan’s preaching career began in earnest as he balanced roles as an educator and minister. He served as a professor at Washington College (1840–1852), teaching English, chemistry, and natural history, while preaching among local Disciples congregations. In 1852, he joined Indiana State University as Professor of Mathematics, then moved to Bethany College in 1854 to teach chemistry and natural philosophy under Alexander Campbell’s mentorship. His most significant ministry came as president of Kentucky University (1859–1865) and later as head of its College of the Bible in Lexington (1865–1875), where he shaped generations of ministers despite the Civil War’s disruptions. A prolific writer, he co-edited the Millennial Harbinger with Campbell and penned works like The Scheme of Redemption (1868) and A Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews (1875), emphasizing biblical authority and Christian unity. Physically frail from chronic ailments—rheumatism, neuralgia, and optic nerve damage—he refused alcohol-based treatments to avoid influencing students negatively, a testament to his pastoral care. Milligan died on March 20, 1875, in Lexington, Kentucky, leaving a legacy as a preacher whose scholarship and faith enriched the Disciples of Christ, commemorated by the naming of Milligan College (now University) in Tennessee in his honor. He was buried in Lexington Cemetery, survived by Ellen and mourned by a wide Christian community.