Barton, George Aaron
BARTON, GEORGE AARON: Friend; b. at
East Farnham, Canada, Nov. 12, 1859. He was
educated at Haverford College, Haverford (B.A.,
1882), and Harvard University (Ph.D., 1891).
He was teacher of mathematics and classics at the
Friends’ School, Providence, R. I., in 1884-89, and
lecturer on Bible languages in Haverford College
in 1891-95, while in 1891 he was appointed professor
of Biblical literature and Semitic languages
at Bryn Mawr College, a position which he still
holds. He has been a member of the American
Oriental Society since 1888, of the Society of Biblical
Archeology, London, since 1889, of the Society of
Biblical Literature and Exegesis since 1891, of the
Archeological Institute of America since 1900, of
the Vorderasiatische Gesellschaft, Berlin, since 1899,
of the Victoria Institute, London, since 1902, and
of the Orients-Gesellschaft, Berlin, and the Egypt
Exploration Fund since 1904. He was president
of the Oriental Club of Philadelphia in 1898-99, and
a member of the council of the Society of Biblical
Literature and Exegesis in 1900-03, and in 1903-04
was one of the executive committee of the
American School of Oriental Research in Palestine,
of which he was director in the previous year.
He was also a delegate to the Inter-Church Conference
in 1905, and since 1879 has been an acknowledged
minister of the Society of Friends (orthodox).
In theology he is in general agreement with the
so-called “new theology.” In addition to briefer
studies and contributions to various religious
encyclopedias, he has written The Religious Use
of the Bible (Philadelphia, 1900); The Roots of
Christian Teaching as Found in the Old Testament (1902);
A Sketch of Semitic Origins, Social and Religious
(New York, 1902); A Year’s Wandering
in Bible Lands (Philadelphia, 1904); and The
Haverford Library Collection of Cuneiform Tablets
or Documents from the Temple Archives of Telloh
(1905)