He was born on 18 October 1857 in Kincardine,[1] the son of Margaret Nicholson,[3] daughter of Reverend Nicholson of Whithorn, and James Johnston of Mansionhouse of Sands (in Fife).[4]
From 1919 he was President of the Scottish Boys' Brigade. From 1921 he chaired the Carnegie Trust for University Education.[1] He was awarded several honorary doctorates by the Scottish Universities including being created a Doctor of Divinity by the University of Edinburgh.[3]
He died in Edinburgh on 26 February 1934, aged 76. He is buried in the modern extension to Dean Cemetery off Queensferry Road in western Edinburgh. His grave lies against the north wall in the modern equivalent of Lord's Row in the original cemetery, forming one off a group of senators of the college of justice buried together. His wife lies with him.
Family
In 1898 he married Agnes ("Nancy") Warren Dunn (1868–1955) of Dunmullin. They had two daughters and two sons, including James Wellwood Johnston and Alice Crawford Johnston CBE. They lived at 4 Heriot Row in Edinburgh's New Town.[8]
Publications
The Ecclesiastical Law of Scotland.
Episcopacy in Scotland. 1879.
The Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act. 1883.
The Crofters Holdings (Scotland) Act. 1886.
The Handbook of Scottish Church Defence. 1892.
Church Finance. 1905.
Major Owen and Other Tales. 1909.
The Seven Churches of Asia. 1916.
John Blaw of Castlehill: Jacobite and Criminal. 1916.
Dr Archibald Scott of St Georges, Edinburgh, and his times. 1919.[9]
Off the Chain. 1924. short stories
The Story of St Stephens, Edinburgh 1828–1928. 1927.