Background
Boag was born at Highgate in the parish of Beith, Ayrshire, on 7 January 1775.
Boag was born at Highgate in the parish of Beith, Ayrshire, on 7 January 1775.
University of Glasgow.
He acted for many years as an evangelist, and not infrequently in the open air or by the wayside. He had small charges in the Isle of Manitoba and Helensburgh. Ultimately he accepted the appointment of pastor over a very small independent congregation in the village of Blackburn, Linlithgowshire, from which, it is believed, he never received more than 25 to 30 pounds a year.
He also kept a day-school on his own accountant
lieutenant was in this humble position that Boag compiled his magnum opus. His aim was to combine etymology, pronunciation, and explanation of scientific terms and others used in art and literature.
He wished also to incorporate (1) new words since Johnson, and (2) modifications and other changes of meanings. He commenced this arduous undertaking after he had entered his seventieth year.
Within three years his manuscript was ready for the press
lieutenant was printed and published by the Edinburgh Printing and Publishing Company. Unfortunately this company speedily became bankrupt. About 1847 Messrs. Fullarton & Company became proprietors of the "Imperial Lexicon", and issued it in parts or numbers, constituting two massive volumes.
The work had an enormous sale and held its own until the publication of Ogilvie"s Dictionary, which was largely based upon lieutenant
Prefixed was a "Popular Grammar of the English Language," by Mr. R. Whyte. Besides his "Imperial Lexicon," Boag was the author of a number of pamphlets on questions of the day, and was a frequent contributor to contemporary religious periodicals.