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.

Rev Charles Frederick Garnsey

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]

Ministry in Sydney

Death and legacy

References

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