Richard Rhodes Bristow

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Richard Rhodes Bristow
Canon
Richard Rhodes Bristow
Richard Rhodes Bristow, Lithograph, National Portrait Gallery
Church1866 St Philip's Church, Clerkenwell
1868 St Stephen's, Lewisham
1897 St Olave's Church, Southwark
Other postHon. Canon Rochester Cathedral
Orders
Ordination1866 (deacon)
by Bishop Of Rupert's Land
Personal details
BornJune 1838
Died15 March 1914 (aged 7576)
BuriedLewisham[1]
NationalityBritish
Children4
Alma materSt Mary Hall, Oxford

Canon Richard Rhodes Bristow MA (June 1838 – 15 March 1914) was an English clergyman in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and was involved with various church and charitable organisations.

Born in Greenwich, England, the son of a wool importer, Bristow was a deacon of St Philip's Church, Clerkenwell, and vicar of St Stephen's, Lewisham, and was Canon missioner of Southwark Cathedral, and Hon. Canon of Rochester Cathedral. Bristow spent his 48-year working life in London, and, upon his death, was described as "one of the most active and best-known clergymen in the metropolis".[2]

He was the fourth[3] and youngest son of Henry Essex Bristow, a wool importer of Bread Street, London. He was born in Greenwich in June 1838,[4] and was educated privately.[2] He gained his BA from St Mary Hall, Oxford 1866, and his MA in 1868. He was ordained deacon in 1866, and priest in 1867 by the Bishop of Rochester.[5]

Incumbencies

He was a deacon of St Philip's Church, Clerkenwell before transferring to become vicar of St Stephen's, Lewisham in 1868, where he remained for 29 years.[2]

Canon

St Olaves Southwark, where Bristow was curate

He was rector of Southwark Cathedral from 1897, and proctor in convocation at Rochester from 1892.[6]

In 1896, Bristow also caused controversy at a Southwark Ruridecanal Conference with his statement that a "licensed victualler is an important member of the community, and a good public house is advantage to a parish". In 1906, a protest was made by the trustees of the church against paying the canon's stipend of £600 a year on grounds of 'insufficient attention to the work of the parish'. The Bishop of Southwark wrote in reply that Bristow had 'requested him to throw most of his energy into the work of the cathedral and diocese' and admitted that the rectorship of St Olave's was 'practically a sinecure'.[7]

Other roles and duties

Personal life

References

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