Lorimer Fison

Lorimer Fison
Born(1832-11-09)9 November 1832
Died29 December 1907(1907-12-29) (aged 75)
Essendon, Melbourne, Australia
OccupationMethodist minister
Academic background
Alma materCaius College
University of Melbourne
Academic work
Disciplineanthropology
Main interestscustoms of Fijians and Indigenous Australians

Lorimer Fison (9 November 1832 – 29 December 1907) was an Australian anthropologist, Methodist minister and journalist.

Early life

Fison was born at Barningham, Suffolk, England, the son of Thomas Fison, a prosperous landowner, and his wife Charlotte, a daughter of the Rev. John Reynolds, who was a translator of seventeenth-century religious writers. Fison was educated at a school at Sheffield, then at the University of Cambridge where he studied with a tutor before becoming a student of Caius College in June 1855.[1] After a "boyish escapade" at college he left for Australia.[2] His sister was Anna Fison, translator and educator.

Late life

Fison died on 29 December 1907 at Essendon, Melbourne.

Notes

  1. ^ "Fison, Lorimer (FY855L)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  2. ^ Stanner, W. E. H. (1972). "Lorimer Fison". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISBN 978-0-522-84459-7. ISSN 1833-7538. OCLC 70677943. Retrieved 2 June 2012.

References

C. Irving Benson (ed), A Century of Victorian Methodism (Melbourne, 1935); C. B. Fletcher, The Black Knight of the Pacific (Sydney, 1944); G. Brown, ‘Lorimer Fison’, Australasian Methodist Missionary Review, Feb 1908; J. G. Frazer, ‘Howitt and Fison’, Folk-Lore (London), 20 (1909); B. J. Stern (ed), ‘Selections from the letters of Lorimer Fison … to Lewis Henry Morgan’, American Anthropologist, 32 (1930); The Age (Melbourne), 31 December 1907