Thomas Madden (priest)

Last updated

Thomas John Madden (25 July 1853 - 26 December 1915 [1] ) was Archdeacon of Liverpool from 1906 until his death. [2]

Madden was ordained in 1879 [3] and was a curate in Everton. [4] He was metropolitan secretary of the Church Pastoral Aid Society from 1883 to 1885; vicar of St Mark's Barrow-in-Furness from 1885 to 1888; and vicar of St Luke's Liverpool from 1888 to 1906. [5]

His son was killed during the First World War in March 1915. [6] He died in December that year, aged 62.

Notes

  1. "Death Of Archdeacon Madden", The Times (London, England), 27 December 1915, p. 5.
  2. "Madden, Ven. Thomas John", Who Was Who online edition, accessed 23 June 2015]
  3. "Ordination at Chester Cathedral", Cheshire Observer (Chester, England), 14 June 1879, p. 6.
  4. The Clergy List, Clerical Guide and Ecclesiastical Directory, London, John Phillips, 1900.
  5. "Ecclesiastical Intelligence", Liverpool Mercury (Liverpool, England), 5 December 1888.
  6. CWGC website.


Related Research Articles

John Howson (priest)

John Saul Howson, British divine, was born at Giggleswick-on-Craven, Yorkshire.

Lucius Smith

Lucius Frederick Moses Bottomley Smith was the inaugural Bishop of Knaresborough from 1905 to 1934.

Charles Lisle Carr

Charles Lisle Carr was an Anglican clergyman who served as the second bishop of the restored see of Coventry in the modern era and the 107th Bishop of Hereford in a long line stretching back to the 7th century.

William Sinclair (archdeacon of London)

William Macdonald Sinclair (1850–1917) was an eminent Anglican priest and author in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Benedict George Hoskyns was an Anglican priest in the first third of the 20th century.

The Venerable James Francis Howson (1856–1934) was Archdeacon of Craven from 1928 to 1934.

Reginald Prideaux Lightfoot was a British Anglican priest. He was the Archdeacon of Oakham in the Church of England from 1880 to 1905.

The archdeacons in the Diocese of Liverpool are senior ecclesiastical officers in the Church of England in a highly irregular area surrounding the city of Liverpool. They are the archdeacons of Liverpool, of St Helens and Warrington, of Knowsley and Sefton, and of Wigan and West Lancashire; each one has responsibility over a geographical area within the diocese. The archdeacons are responsible for the disciplinary supervision of the clergy within their archdeaconries.

Charles Ernest Hopton was Archdeacon of Birmingham from 1915 to 1944.

Edward Shaw Richardson was Archdeacon of Blackburn from 1920 to 1921.

The Ven Gerald Edward Nicolls was Archdeacon of Lahore from 1909 to 1912.

Henry Martindale (1879-1946) was Archdeacon of Bombay from 1927 until 1933.

George Hardwicke Spooner was an Anglican priest and author in the first half of the Twentieth century.

Ven. Herbert Ernest Campbell was an Anglican Archdeacon in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

William Francis Taylor, DD was an Archdeacon in the Diocese of Liverpool.

John Jones (1791–1889) was the second Archdeacon of Liverpool, serving from 1855 until 1886.

Arthur Kitchin

Arthur Kitchin was Archdeacon of Calcutta from 1903 to 1907.

Charles Furse (priest)

Charles Wellington Furse, MA, JP was Archdeacon of Westminster from 1894 until his death.

The Venerable George Henry Cameron was an Anglican archdeacon in Africa during the first half of the 20th century.

David Henry Griffiths (1864-1926) was a Welsh Anglican priest, most notably Archdeacon of Monmouth from 1921 until his death.