Harry Radcliffe
Harry Sydney Radcliffe (7 May 1867 - 6 October 1949) was Archdeacon of Lynn from 1926 to 1946; and as such he played a leading role in the removal of the Rector of Stiffkey in 1932.[1]
The fourth son of Sir David Radcliffe,[2] Lord Mayor of Liverpool from 1884 to 1886, he was born in that city[3] on 7 May 1867 and educated at its college.[4] In 1884 he was commissioned as a volunteer officer into the Liverpool Rifles.[5] He graduated from Exeter College, Oxford in 1893 and was ordained after a period of study at Leeds Clergy School two years later. Radcliffe began his ecclesiastical career with a curacy in Aspull.[6] After this he was Rector of Gaywood, Norfolk[7] from 1906 to 1946; and Rural Dean of Lynn from 1918 to 1926.
An authority on Norfolk Church plate,[8] he died at Fakenham on 6 October 1949.[9]
Notes
- The Rector Of Stiffkey The Times (London, England), Monday, Jun 13, 1932; pg. 14; Issue 46158; Stiffkey Parish Church The Times (London, England), Tuesday, Jun 14, 1932; pg. 11; Issue 46159.; The Rector Of Stiffkey Bishop’s sentence of Deprivation The Times (London, England), Saturday, Oct 22, 1932; pg. 7; Issue 46271
- Art UK
- thePeerage.com
- ‘RADCLIFFE, Ven. Harry Sydney’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2012 ; online edn, Oct 2012 accessed 29 July 2013
- London Gazette
- Crockford's Clerical Directory1929 p1060
- Bere Regis.org
- Church Care
- Obituary The Times (London, England), Saturday, Oct 08, 1949; pg. 7; Issue 51507