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A Victorian Primate1a
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
One year before the accession of Victoria, a young Scot, reared in a Presbyterian home, educated at Edinburgh and Glasgow, now a Fellow of Balliol, was ordained deacon in the Church of England. Six years later he succeeded the great Dr. Arnold as Headmaster of Rugby. Another seven years, and Lord John Russell nominated him to be Dean of Carlisle. In 1856, Viscount Palmerston conveyed to him—recently stricken by the death of five of his children—the Queen's command tendering the see of London. Only once before in the course of two centuries had a man not already a bishop been named to the metropolitan diocese. In another twelve years—years of conflict and of progress, marked, too, by his refusal of York—Disraeli designated him to Canterbury on the death of Archbishop Longley—the first Scotchman in history to occupy the throne of Augustine.
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- Copyright © American Society of Church History 1945
References
1 Cornish, Francis Warre, The English Church in the Nineteenth Century (London, 1910), II, 347.Google Scholar
2 Bell, G. K. A., Randall Davidson, Archbishop of Canterbury (Oxford, 1936), I, 170.Google Scholar
3 Cf. Opening address at Lambeth. Conference of 1878, Davidson, Randall and Benham, , Life of Tait, II, 371 ff.Google Scholar
4 Davidson, and Benham, , Life, I, 198.Google Scholar
5 Ibid., I, 538.
6 Davidson, and Benham, , Life, I, 81.Google Scholar
7 Ibid., I, 275
8 Ibid., I, 304.
9 Ibid., I, 325.
10 Ibid., I, 343.
11 Ibid., I, 345.
12 Cox, , Life of Colenso, I, 239.Google Scholar
13 Davidson, and Benham, , Life, II, 31.Google Scholar
14 Cf. Archbishop Trench, Ibid., II, 43.
15 Ibid., II, 225.
16 Ibid., II, 148.
17 Curtis, W. R., The Lambeth Conferences, (New York, 1942), 279.Google Scholar
18 Ibid., 280.
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