Charles Frederick Garnsey
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Charles Frederick Garnsey (15 November 1828 – 3 December 1894) was an Anglican priest and pioneer of Anglo-Catholicism in Australia.

Charles Frederick Garnsey was born in Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire, the son of an evangelical clergyman, Thomas Rock Garnsey (1792–1847), the incumbent of Christ Church, Berry Hill.[1] He was educated at Monmouth Grammar School.[2]
Garnsey arrived in Australia in 1848 and tutored the children of Francis Nixon the Anglican Bishop of Tasmania. Nixon made him a Deacon in 1853.
A Freemason, Garnsey joined the Lodge of Hope in Launceston, in 1855.[3] In New South Wales, he was a Worshipful Master of the Windsor Social Lodge No 275.[4] He was Grand Chaplain at the formation of the Grand Lodge of New South Wales in 1877.[5]
He continued work as a teacher and moved to Sydney in 1858, where he taught at Rev William Savigny's collegiate school at Cook's River. At this time, while a worshipper at Christ Church St Laurence, he met his future wife, Mary Emma Stiles (1837–1886), the daughter of Henry Tarlton Stiles,[6] the incumbent of St Matthew's Anglican Church, Windsor.
Ministry at Windsor
Garnsey promptly set up his own collegiate school at Windsor, in 1860,[7] and married Mary Stiles in the same year.
In 1864, Bishop Frederic Barker ordained Garnsey priest. He became curate to his father-in-law and succeeded him at Windsor, upon Stiles’ death in 1867.
Under the influence of Bishop Nixon, Garnsey had become a high churchman and, as such, clashed with a group of low churchmen in Windsor, including the astronomer, John Tebbutt.[8][9] Controversies included one, in 1864, about the introduction of Chope's Hymnal;[10] one, in 1866, about the use of black drapes in the church during Lent;[11] and another, in 1874, about the large cross that surmounted a memorial in the church to Captain William Blake.[12]
At Windsor Garnsey gained a reputation for his heroic conduct during various floods,[13] and a devastating fire in the town in 1874.[8] In the flood of 1867, he and a helper rescued 35 people,[8] and his residence accommodated about 200 people rendered homeless by the flood.[14]
