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Hugh Martin

Hugh Martin (August 11, 1822 – June 14, 1885) was a Scottish preacher and theologian whose ministry within the Free Church of Scotland blended profound biblical exposition with a fervent call to faith across the mid-19th century. Born in Aberdeen, Scotland, to parents whose details are not widely documented—likely a modest Presbyterian family—he excelled academically, earning top mathematics prizes at Marischal College, Aberdeen (M.A., 1839), before studying divinity at King’s College, initially showing little evangelical zeal. His conversion came in 1842 during a General Assembly speech by William Cunningham, aligning him with the Free Church at the 1843 Disruption. Martin’s preaching career began with his ordination in 1844 as the first Free Church minister of Panbride, near Carnoustie, where he served until 1858, followed by a call to Greyfriars Free Church, Edinburgh (1858–1863). Illness forced his retirement at 42, but he continued preaching itinerantly, delivering sermons marked by theological depth and sanctified eloquence, as preserved in works like The Shadow of Calvary (1875) and Christ for Us (1882). A brilliant mathematician and writer, he authored The Atonement (1870), defending substitutionary atonement, and served as a University Examiner in Mathematics (1866–1868). Married to Elizabeth Jane Robertson in 1846, with whom he had a son, Alexander (later Principal of New College), he passed away at age 62 in Dundee, Scotland.