Haldane is best remembered as the chief proprietor of
The Record, the campaigning evangelical newspaper he helped found in 1828. It began publication in January 1828, but almost immediately financial troubles arose. Haldane was with a lay evangelical group that rescued it later in the year. From that point, to his death in 1881, he wrote most of the paper's editorials. The line taken was a strident Calvinistic
evangelicalism: Tory, anti-Catholic, opposed to
Broad Church thinking and the left.
The Record gave its name to the "Recordite" faction of evangelicals in the
Church of England. By the 1830s their characteristic views were represented in Parliament and proposed legislation. The term "Recordite" itself was brought to wide attention by
William John Conybeare in the
Edinburgh Review for October 1853, who derided the position attached to it as a dogmatisation and rigidification of evangelical practices. Haldane's
Record returned the compliment the following month, describing Conybeare as "a brummagem
Sydney Smith." ==Associations==