William England (priest)

William England (26 August 1767 in Blandford Forum 15 November 1834 in West Stafford) [1] was a Church of England clergyman, Archdeacon of Dorset from 1815[2] to 1835.[3]

Educated at St John’s College, Cambridge, he was Rector of Great Yeldham, Essex from 1782 to 1804. He was Rector of Winterborne Came, Dorset from 1804 to 1820, with St Germaine and Ower Moigne from 1808 to 1820. From 1820 until his death in 1835 he was Rector of Ower Moigne and West Stafford with Frome Billet.[4] He was at St Andrew, West Stafford[5] for over fifty years.[6]

Notes

  1. Geograph
  2. "MISCELLANEOUS INTELLIGENCE" Falmouth Packet (Cornwall, England), Saturday, 11 November 1815; Issue 646
  3. British History On-line
  4. "England, William (ENGT774W)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  5. Dorchester Anglican
  6. Dorset Ancestors


gollark: It's like with, say, random poverty-stricken countries. They could probably have quite a lot of their problems solved if people actually cared very much. But they don't, because moral obligation actually drops off according to the inverse-square law.
gollark: High compared to what?
gollark: Also, animal-friendly meat production is unlikely to beat non-animal-friendly meat production unless consumers in general actually care much about animal-friendliness, which they probably don't.
gollark: I am not a vegan because I like some non-vegan things.
gollark: One must be sure.
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