Walton Hannah

William Walton Thomson Hannah (9 October 1912 – 26 February 1966)[1] was an Anglican clergyman from Forest Row, Sussex who converted to Roman Catholicism and who wrote the book Darkness Visible.[2]

In January 1951, Hannah wrote an article "Should a Christian be a Freemason?" in Theology, a magazine produced by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. This was controversial, as both the King and Geoffrey Fisher, the Archbishop of Canterbury, were Freemasons, as were many Anglican clerics. The Church of England Assembly discussed the subject in June 1951, although there was no substantive conclusion.[2]

Darkness Visible was published in 1952. He later published Christian by Degrees, left England for Canada and became a Roman Catholic priest.

Hannah earned his M.A. from the University of Edinburgh in 1934. He died in Montreal in 1966.[3]

Works

  • Darkness Visible, 1952. ISBN 1-901157-70-9
  • Christian by Degrees, 1954. ISBN 0-85172-892-8
gollark: I mean, the UK practices censorship, but you can access popular websites and stuff mostly.
gollark: <@459753730846228483> BANNING POPULAR WEBSITES? What country is this?!
gollark: Nobody thought of the long-term consequences, like how the library is now overcrowded because people need to use the computers.
gollark: It was a good policy. Unfortunately, they are clearly pure evil because of misuse and therefore banned.
gollark: We had that before.

References

  1. Library of Congress name authority file
  2. A review of Darkness Visible, Timothy Tindal-Robertson, The Angelus, October 1990. Retrieved 2011-06-11.
  3. "Deaths". University of Edinburgh Journal. 23: 338. 1966. WILLIAM WALTON THOMSON HANNAH, M.A. 1934 : in Montreal, 26th February 1966.
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