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・ John James Hall
・ John James Halls
・ John James Harrop
・ John James Hattstaedt
・ John James Heidegger
・ John James Ingalls
・ John James Jackson
・ John James Joass
・ John James Jones
・ John James Joseph Monaghan
・ John James Ketterer
・ John James Kingsbury
・ John James Kinley
・ John James Knight
・ John James Knowlton
John Jackson (clergyman)
・ John Jackson (controversialist)
・ John Jackson (cricketer, born 1833)
・ John Jackson (cricketer, born 1841)
・ John Jackson (cricketer, born 1898)
・ John Jackson (Derbyshire politician)
・ John Jackson (Devonport MP)
・ John Jackson (engraver)
・ John Jackson (football manager)
・ John Jackson (footballer, born 1906)
・ John Jackson (footballer, born 1923)
・ John Jackson (footballer, born 1942)
・ John Jackson (law professor)
・ John Jackson (mayor)
・ John Jackson (minister)


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John Jackson (clergyman) : ウィキペディア英語版
John Jackson (clergyman)
John Jackson ( – 1717) was the first chaplain to the garrison at St John's, Newfoundland,
and is credited with building the first Anglican church in Newfoundland.
Jackson was appointed chaplain of the St. John's garrison in 1700 and sailed to Newfoundland with his wife and eight children in 1701. It is possible that Jackson also served as chaplain on Sir John Norris and Sir John Gibsone's 1697 expedition to the island.〔 Initially, Jackson's salary of fifty pounds ''per annum'' depended on tithes from the civilian population, but by 1703 he was recognized by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts.
He arrived to a tense atmosphere, pitting officers against their soldiers and the town's civilians. Jackson consistently opposed the officers and was accused of sowing "discord among the inhabitants". Jackson repeatedly wrote to his superiors in England complaining about the behaviour of the officers, including Michael Richards and Thomas Lloyd.〔
Over the winter of 1704–1705 a group of officers, including Richards and Lloyd, complained to the Board of Trade in London that Jackson was a disruptive influence and requested his recall. In 1705 Jackson and his family (now eleven children) left Newfoundland aboard the ''Falkland''. The ship ran aground in Sandwich Bay, Kent. No lives were lost, but the family lost most of their possessions.〔
In 1709 Jackson took a post as curate in Dursley, Gloucestershire. He married a woman named Mary Bissett in 1710. (The fate of his first wife is unknown; she may have died in Newfoundland.) In the same year, he became rector of Uley.〔
==References==



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