Henry Ralph Nevill (17 June 1821 - 17 October 1900) [1] was Archdeacon of Norfolk from 1874 until his death.
Nevill was educated at Rugby and University College, Oxford. He was ordained in 1848. [2] After a curacy in Great Yarmouth he was Vicar of St Mark, Norwich from 1857 to 1858; and then of Great Yarmouth from 1858 to 1873. [3]
Ralph Stratford, also known as Ralph Hatton of Stratford, was a medieval Bishop of London.
Henry Rudge Hayward (1831-1912) was Archdeacon of Cheltenham from 1883 to 1908.
William Donne was Archdeacon of Huddersfield from 1892 to 1913.
The Ven. Charles Edward Blakeway (1868-1922) was Archdeacon of Stafford from 1911 until his death.
The Ven. Melville Horne Scott (1827–1898) was Archdeacon of Stafford from 1888 until his death.
Francis Henry Dumville Smythe was the Archdeacon of Lewes from 1929 to 1946.
Louis John Baggott was an Anglican priest and author.
William Henry Askwith was Archdeacon of Taunton from 1903 until his death.
Benjamin Frederick Smith was the Archdeacon of Maidstone from 1897 until 1900.
Christopher Owen George was Archdeacon of Suffolk from 1947 to 1961.
William Everingham was Archdeacon of Suffolk from 1917 until his death
Richard Hudson Gibson was Archdeacon of Suffolk from 1892 to 1901.
Hugh Cairns Alexander Back was Archdeacon of Warwick from 1923 until his death.
Thomas Frederick Buckton was an Anglican Archdeacon in the Mediterranean from 1922 until his death.
The Venerable John William Sheringham was an English clergyman.
The Ven. Henry Thomas Dixon, D.D. was an Anglican priest: he was Archdeacon of Ludlow from 1932 to his death.
Brooke Deedes was an Anglican priest in the last three decades of the 19th century and the first three of the 20th.
Robert Long (1803–1907) was a British Anglican priest, most notably Archdeacon of Auckland from 1881 until his death.
The Ven Richard Phipps was Archdeacon of Halifax from 1923 to 1927; and then, when it was renamed, of Pontefract from 1927 to 1930.
Charles Wellington Furse, MA, JP was Archdeacon of Westminster from 1894 until his death.