Maxwell Nicholson
Jonah Maxwell Nicholson (30 July 1818 – 30 December 1874) was a Scottish minister and author.
Life
    

He was born in Whithorn in south-west Scotland on 30 July 1818[1] He was the fourth of nine children of Mary Kirkpatrick and her husband, Rev Christopher Nicholson (1780-1867).[2]
He studied divinity at the University of Edinburgh.[3] In 1849 he was minister of Pencaitland in East Lothian.[4] He was minister first of the Tron Kirk on the Royal Mile and latterly (from June 1867) of St Stephen's Church in Stockbridge, Edinburgh[5] in replacement of Rev Dr Muir.
In 1866 he is noted as being seriously injured in a fall from his gig near Tranent railway station.[6]
He lived at 3 Regent Terrace for most of his later life but moved to 7 Royal Circus in 1874.[7] He died there in the early hours of 30 December 1874.[8] He is buried in the south-west section of the original section of Grange Cemetery.
Publications
    
- Preparation for the Coming of the Son of Man
 - Baptism, its Nature, Efficacy and Improvement (1850)
 - The Christian Conflict (1861)
 - The Heavenly Jerusalem (1866)
 - The Faithful Pastor (1869)
 - Family Prayers (1874)
 - Redeeming the Time and Other Sermons (1875)
 - Rest In Jesus (posthumous 1877)
 - Communion with Heaven and Other Sermons (posthumous 1877)
 
Family
    
He was married to Frances Isabella Oliphant (1818-1892) daughter of James Stuart Oliphant. They had seven children.[2]
References
    
- Edinburgh Evening News 31 Dec 1874
 - "RootsWeb: SCT-WIGTOWNSHIRE-L [WIG LIST] Benjamin Nicholson (ca 1722) Dumfries". archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Archived from the original on 15 September 2016.
 - Fifeshire Advertiser 2 Jan 1875
 - Elgin Courant 22 June 1849
 - Fife Herald 31 Dec 1874
 - Dundee Advertiser 27 Feb 1866
 - Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directories 1872 to 1874
 - Dundee Courier, 31 December 1874