A chance find in an Oxford blog

Truth and fiction in the life of
the Rev Edmund Stringfellow Radcliffe

I was gathering information on Preston clergy and came across a post that a Classics professor at Oxford University published on his blog about Edmund Stringfellow Radcliffe, a minister at St Leonard’s, Walton-le-Dale.

I’ve come across Radcliffe before. He features in a fictional autobiography about an English Jacobin sympathiser that is set in Walton-le-Dale and in Paris at the time of the Revolution. It was written by Thomas Wheeler, a Radical journalist and Chartist, who was educated at a boarding school in Walton-le-Dale when Radcliffe was the minister at St Leonard’s:

Professor Llewelyn Morgan publishes his blog with the title Lugubelinus: The marginalia of an easily distracted Classicist. Here’s what he wrote about Radcliffe, the perpetual curate at St Leonard’s from 1803 until his death in 1826:


Graffito by Edmund Radcliffe at Brasenose College, Oxford
Graffito by Edmund Radcliffe in the choir stalls at Brasenose College, Oxford

Last week, strictly as a stress-reducing measure, I did what anyone else would do and researched the life of a nineteenth-century pastor.

100% to blame for all the time I wasted, and the time you are currently wasting, is Adele Curness, who tweeted an image of a graffito from the choir stalls of Brasenose College Chapel. E.S. Radcliffe, who had expended such loving care inscribing his name there, was easy enough to find once I opted for Edmund over Edward: he turned out to be Edmund Stringfellow Radcliffe, who was born on February 23 1775 and died on January 20 1826. A Lancastrian from a prosperous background, he was typical of the intake to Brasenose College at this period in its history.

Entering the church, like many of his student contemporaries, Radcliffe lived a comfortable and uneventful life, to all appearances. He secured the living of Walton-le-Dale near Preston in 1803, and adding a Perpetual Curacy of Burnley in 1817. This was pluralism, the holding of multiple offices, but a comparatively benign example if Radcliffe was also able (unlike many of his clerical contemporaries) to serve the parish of Burnley, around 25 miles away. In 1810 he married Frances Ford (born 1789, seemingly of a similarly well-to-do family), and between then and Edmund’s death they had a large family, nine children (by my count) in total. It was these that I found myself, in an entirely unsystematic fashion, chasing through the census records this week.

Here they are:

1. Edmund Ford, born 1811, dies as an infant in January 1812;
2. Edmund Ford, born 1812;
3. Frances Emily, born 1813;
4. Sarah Ann, born 1815;
5. Dulcibella, born 1817;
6. Robert Parker, born 1819;
7. Charles Wilbraham, born 1821;
8. John Randle, born 1823;
9. George Travis, born 1825.

After Edmund Stringfellow Radcliffe’s death in 1826, his widow Frances moved from Lancashire to Rugby, where all her sons went to school.


To read more: https://llewelynmorgan.com/2017/10/31/e-s-radcliffe-1798/


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