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William Cathcart

William Cathcart (November 8, 1826 – July 8, 1908) was an Irish-born American preacher, Baptist historian, and author whose scholarly contributions and pastoral leadership made him a towering figure in 19th-century Baptist life. Born in County Londonderry, Ireland, to James Cathcart and Elizabeth Cously of Scotch-Irish descent, he was raised in the Presbyterian Church. Converted in early life, he was baptized in January 1846 by Rev. R.H. Carson of Tubbermore and soon felt called to preach. Cathcart studied Latin and Greek at a classical school near his father’s home, then pursued literary and theological education at the University of Glasgow, Scotland, and Horton College (now Rawdon College) in Yorkshire, England. Ordained in 1850, he began his preaching career as pastor of the Baptist church in Barnsley, near Sheffield, England. Driven by anti-state church convictions, Cathcart immigrated to the United States in 1853, arriving in New York on November 18. He pastored the Third Baptist Church in Groton, Connecticut, from December 1853 to April 1857, before taking charge of the Second Baptist Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he served for over 30 years until retiring in 1887 due to health strains. His preaching, marked by eloquence and conviction, grew the Philadelphia congregation significantly. In 1873, the University of Lewisburg (now Bucknell) awarded him a Doctor of Divinity. A prolific writer, he authored The Baptists and the American Revolution (1876), The Papal System (1872), and his magnum opus, The Baptist Encyclopaedia (1881), a two-volume work hailed by Thomas Armitage as a unique literary feat among Baptists, cementing his legacy as a historian.