Background
Craig was the son of Rev Robert Craig, minister in Ardentinny in Argyll, Scotland.
Craig was the son of Rev Robert Craig, minister in Ardentinny in Argyll, Scotland.
He was educated at Madras College, Street Andrews and then studied classics at the University of Street Andrews under Wallace Lindsay and John Burnet, before moving to Jesus College, Oxford for further studies.
He was the younger brother of Robert Meldrum Craig FRSE, the geologist and Professor James Manson Craig of Street Andrews University. He obtained a first-class degree in classics at Street Andrews, and a second-class degree in Literae Humaniores at Oxford. He then assisted Lindsay in Street Andrews from 1912 to 1913 before becoming Assistant Professor of Classics at Queen"s University, in Kingston, Ontario, Canada in 1913.
In 1915, he left Canada to be commissioned in the Royal Artillery and was severely wounded in action at the Battle of the Somme.
He returned to Ontario in 1919 as Acting Professor of Latin, moving to the University of Sheffield as Lecturer in Classics in 1920, and back to Street Andrews in 1924 as Lecturer in Humanity. During this time, he undertook a lot of the teaching and administrative work that Lindsay was unable to due because of increasing deafness.
Craig returned to Sheffield as Firth Professor of Latin in 1930, building up good relations with the classics department at the nearby University of Leeds, before retiring to live in Street Andrews in 1952. He became a town councillor in his efforts to preserve Street Andrews from change, a task in which he was not always successful and sometimes aroused opposition.
His main scholarship was on the Roman author Terence, but his teaching work was also highly regarded.