W. J. E. Bennett
Vicar
ChurchChurch of England
In office1852–1886
Orders
Ordination6 June 1830
by Bishop of London
Personal details
Born
William James Early Bennett

15 November 1804
NationalityBritish
DenominationAnglican
SpouseMary Concetta Franklin
Alma materChrist Church, Oxford

William James Early Bennett (1804–1886) was an Anglican priest. Bennett is celebrated for having provoked the decision that the doctrine of the Real Presence is a dogma not inconsistent with the creed of the Church of England. This followed the publication of his pamphlet A Plea for Toleration in the Church of England (1867) in the form of a letter to Edward Bouverie Pusey.

Life

Bennett was born at Halifax, Nova Scotia, on 15 November 1804, the eldest of three sons of Major William Bennett, RE, and Mary Early, daughter of James Early, an officer of the 1st Royal Garrison Battalion. His younger brother, George Augustus Bennett (1807–1845), like their father, served in the Corps of Royal Engineers. His youngest brother, Frederick Hamilton Bennett (1816–73), ordained to the curacy of Daventry (1840), Curate-in-charge of St John's, Worcester (1842–1851), Master of Arts, Christ Church, Oxford (1843), served his final appointment as the first vicar of Saint Mary the Virgin, Freeland, Oxfordshire, from 1869.

Bennett was educated at Westminster School and Christ Church, Oxford (BA, 1827, MA, 1829).[1] He married Mary Concetta Franklin in 1828, prior to being ordained a priest by the Bishop of London on 6 June 1830.[2] He initially served in 1830 as curate of Oxford Chapel (later called St. Peter's, Vere Street, London), but he soon moved to curacies at Holy Trinity Church Marylebone (1830–1833), followed by All Souls Church, Langham Place (1833–1838). For a while he held this latter post alongside the Perpetual curacy of Portman Chapel, Portman Square 1836–1841). His post was subsequently redesignated as Perpetual curate of St Paul's Church, Knightsbridge and St Barnabas, Pimlico. He supervised the completion of the former church and was effectively the founder of the latter. At the same time he conceived the idea of establishing a college there to accommodate the priests and its choristers. In 1851 he felt obliged to resign these posts following doctrinal complaints and a theological dispute with his bishop, Charles James Blomfield - after being accused of ritualism. Finally in 1852 he was appointed as Vicar of the Church of St John the Baptist, Frome or Frome-Selwood[3] in Somerset, where he remained until his death on 17 August 1886.

A prolific writer, his numerous works were listed in successive editions of Crockford's Clerical Directory. His publication The Old Church Porch (1854–1862), issued at Frome, is sometimes cited as being in effect the first parish magazine,[4] although this claim has been disputed.[5]

A more detailed account of his life and of his contribution to the Oxford Movement was provided by his nephew Frederick Bennett (Frederick Hamilton Bennett's son)[2] formerly Rector of Farleigh, Surrey.

Family

On August 21, 1828 he married Mary Concetta Franklin daughter of William Franklin FRS and his wife Joanna (Gianina) Modesta Paula Trigance. William lived his final years in the Bennett home following the death of his wife around 1832.[6]

Crest of Bennett

Crest—Out of a mural crown or, a lion's head gules. Motto—De bon vouloir servir le roy (To serve the king with good will).[7]

Publications

  • Bennett, William James Early (1868). A Plea for Toleration in the Church of England, in a letter to the Rev. E. B. Pusey, D.D. (3 ed.). London; Froome-Selwood: J. T. Hayes; W. C. & J. Penny.

References

  1. Foster, Joseph (1888–1892). "Bennett, William James Early" . Alumni Oxonienses: the Members of the University of Oxford, 1715–1886. Oxford: Parker and Co via Wikisource.
  2. 1 2 Bennett, Frederick (1909). The Story of W. J. E. Bennett: Founder of S. Barnabas', Pimlico and Vicar of Froome-Selwood and of His Part in the Oxford Church Movement of the Nineteenth Century. London: Longmans.
  3. Crockford's Clerical Directory. 1885.
  4. "William James Early Bennett". Project Canterbury. London: The Catholic Literature Association. 1933. Retrieved 23 November 2011.
  5. "Celebrating 150 years of the parish magazine - unless you know better!". Anglican Communion Office, Anglican Consultative Council. 14 January 2009. Retrieved 24 November 2011. The Anglican Communion News Service states: It is generally thought that Erskine Clarke's Parish Magazine of January 1859 probably marks the real start of the genre.
  6. "Medical Officers of the Malta Garrison: William Franklin 1763–1833".
  7. Almack, Edward (1904). Bookplates. London: Methuen & Co. p. 66.
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