The station was founded in 1824 by the
Glasgow Missionary Society (GMS) and was named after Dr
John Love, one of the leading members of, and at the time secretary to, the society. The site first chosen was in the
Ncera valley, but in 1834 the mission buildings were destroyed during the
6th Frontier War. On rebuilding, the station was removed somewhat farther north to the banks of the Tyhume river.
John Bennie was one of the founding fathers of the mission station, which was established among the Xhosas. In 1846 the work at Lovedale was again interrupted, this time by the
War of the Axe. On this occasion the buildings were converted into a fort and garrisoned by regular troops. In 1850, the Xhosa government threatened Lovedale and made an attack on the neighbouring
Fort Hare, built during the previous war. Until 1841 the missionaries had devoted themselves almost entirely to
evangelistic work; in that year the Lovedale Missionary Institute was founded by William Govan, who, save for brief intervals, continued at its head until 1870. He was then succeeded by
Dr. James Stewart (1831–1905), who had joined the mission in 1867, having previously (1861–1863), and partly in company with
David Livingstone, explored the
Zambezi regions.
Jane Elizabeth Waterston, a Scottish doctor and teacher, was given the job of creating a facility for girls at the mission. She arrived in South Africa in January 1867 to work for Dr James Stewart. The Lovedale Girls' Institution opened on 23 August 1868.
Denomination Until 1837 the mother institution back in Scotland, the GMS, was not attached to any church. The crisis that would lead to the
Disruption of 1843 began brewing in the 1830s, and in 1837 the GMS split in two—those who continued to support the Presbyterian
Church of Scotland and those who disagreed with the Church's official policy, which allowed the church to appoint a pastor even against the wish of the congregation. Lovedale and some other missions went with the Church of Scotland, but others attached themselves to the Glasgow South African Missionary Society, which was associated with the
Relief Church; after the 1843 disruption all of the stations allied with the Church of Scotland, including Lovedale, were transferred to the
Free Church of Scotland. ==Native education==