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James Woodforde

James Woodforde (1740–1803) was an English clergyman, mainly in Somerset and Norfolk, remembered as the author of The Diary of a Country Parson. This vivid account of parish life remained unpublished until the 20th century.[1]

The Revd. James Woodforde
James Woodforde by his nephew Samuel Woodforde
Born1740
Ansford, Somerset
Died1803
NationalityEnglish
EducationWinchester College
Oriel & New College, Oxford
OccupationClergyman
Known forDiarist
Parent(s)Revd Samuel and Jane Woodforde

Early life edit

James Woodforde was born at the Parsonage, Ansford, Somerset, England on 27 June 1740. In adulthood he led an uneventful, unambitious life as a clergyman of the Church of England: a life unremarkable except that for nearly 45 years, he kept a diary recording the everyday routines and concerns of 18th-century rural England.[2]

A descendant of the noted 17th-century diarist, Robert Woodford of Northampton,[3] he was the sixth child of the Reverend Samuel Woodforde, rector of Ansford and vicar of Castle Cary, and his wife Jane Collins. James was one of four brothers (one of whom died in infancy) and the only one to attend public school – Winchester College, and university – Oxford. He was admitted to Winchester as a scholar in 1752 and enrolled at Oriel College, Oxford in 1758, migrating to New College in the following year. His diary begins with the entry for 21 July 1759: "Made a Scholar of New College".[4]

Woodforde was ordained and graduated BA in 1763, became MA in 1767 and BD in 1775. He appears to have been a competent but uninspired student, and the portrait he provides of Oxford during his two periods of residence as scholar and fellow (1758–1763 and 1773–1776) only confirm Edward Gibbon's famously damning opinion that it was a place where the dons' "dull and deep potations excuse the brisk intemperance of youth".[5] The diary is a rich source of information on university life in 18th-century Oxford.[6]

Career edit

Upon leaving the university in 1763, Woodforde returned to Somerset where he worked as a curate, mostly for his father, for ten years. From October 1763 to January 1764 he was the curate at Thurloxton.[7] This period of his life, under-represented in Beresford's abridged edition of the Diary, is thickly peopled with memorable characters from all strata of society, many of them immortalised with nicknames – Peter 'Cherry Ripe' Coles, 'Mumper' Clarke, 'Riddle' Tucker. The extended Woodforde family, including James's frequently drunken brothers, figure prominently in these Somerset years.

 
All Saints' Church, Weston Longville in 2001

On his father's death in 1771, James failed to succeed to his parishes, and likewise failed to win, or rather retain, the heart of Betsy White – "a mere Jilt". He returned to Oxford where he became sub-warden of his college and a pro-proctor of the university. He was unsuccessful in his application to become headmaster of Bedford School, but in 1773, he was presented to the living of Weston Longville in Norfolk, one of the best in the gift of the college, being worth £400 a year. He took up residence at Weston in May 1776.

Despite the wrench of leaving family and friends, he quickly settled down to a comfortable bachelor existence. He thought Norwich "the fairest City in England by far"[8] and always enjoyed a trip to the "sweet beach" at Yarmouth.[9] He was soon joined by his niece Anna Maria (Nancy) as housekeeper and companion, who stayed with him until he died. She also was a diarist and correspondent.[10]

In Norfolk, his social life was more limited, but he enjoyed the fellowship of the local clergy who took it in turns to entertain one another to dinner – "our Rotation Club".[11] Because he always recorded what was provided for dinner, which very occasionally was an elaborate banquet, he is often wrongly characterised as a glutton. Among the gentry in the 18th century, it was a matter of pride to provide a variety of dishes. Because Woodforde recorded them all, does not mean that he ate from them all.

Allegedly advised to do so by his father, Woodforde also provides a meticulous record of his accounts. The daily entries are also accompanied by weather notes. The diary provides a wonderfully full account of the small community in which the diarist lived – of the births and deaths, comings and goings, illnesses and annual celebrations.

The diary not only covers "the Squire and his Relations", but also the rector's servants, the farmers and labourers, carpenter and innkeeper, parish clerk and many others. As a churchman, Woodforde himself was conscientious by the standards of his time, charitable and pious without being sanctimonious and again typical of his day, deeply suspicious of enthusiasm.

The value of the diary to the historian lies in the wealth of primary source material it provides, while the general reader can bring from it the authentic flavour of 18th-century English country life. A display about his life and writings is available in the Castle Cary and District Museum in Somerset.

Writings edit

The Revd James Woodforde was one of several Woodforde diarists. His niece Nancy, and his nephew Bill's three daughters all kept diaries, as did a number of his predecessors, for instance his great-great-grandfather Robert Woodford of Northampton (1606–1654).

The five-volume edition of the diary has one flaw: it is only a selection, and, unaware of how popular it would prove — with Virginia Woolf, Max Beerbohm and Siegfried Sassoon among many thousands more – Beresford selected his first volume from nearly half of the entire Diary.[12] The subsequent volumes, each covering between four and six years, are more complete. A definitive edition has been published by the Parson Woodforde Society.[13] The MS Diary, consisting of 72 notebooks and 100 loose sheets, is deposited in the Bodleian Library, Oxford.[citation needed]

Whilst Woodforde's sermon style has been described by a leading authority as "formal, competent, thorough and scholarly with a wide vocabulary",[14] his diary-writing style is simple, straightforward, informal and even homely. The following extracts give something of their flavour:

11 Jan. 1763 – Went on the River again this Morning a skating, and I have improved in the out Stroke a good deal, I was on the Ice from 12 this Morning , 'till 5 this Afternoon; and I gave a Fellow for putting on my Skates , and sometimes altering then – 0 : 0 : 2.[15]

13 Nov. 1769 – We had News this Morning of Mr Wilkes gaining his Point against Lord Halifax and 400 Pounds Damages given him. Cary & Ansford Bells rung most part of the Day on the Occasion.[16]

14 April 1775 – We breakfasted, dined, suppd & slept at Norwich. We took a Walk over the city in the morning & we both agreed it was the fairest City in England by far.[17]

1 Jan. 1779 – This morning very early about 1. o'clock a most dreadful Storm of Wind with Hail & Snow happened here and the Wind did not quite abait till the Evening. – A little before 2. o'clock I got up, my bedstead rocking under me, and never in my Life that I know of, did I remember the Wind so high or of so long continuance – I expected every Moment that some Part or other of my House must have been blown down, but blessed be God the whole stood, only a few Tiles displaced... My Chancel received great Damage as did my Barn – the Leads from my Chancel were almost all blown up with some Parts of the Roof – the North West Window blown in & smashed all to pieces.[18]

25 Dec. 1786 – It being Christmas Day, I had the following old men dine at my House on roast beef & plumb Pudding and after Dinner half a Pint of strong ale and a shilling to each to carry home to their Wives – Richd Buck, Thos Cushing, Thos Cary, Thos Carr, Nathaniel Heavers, John Buckman, and my Clerk Js Smith.[19]

25 Jan. 1795 – We breakfasted, dined &c. again at home. The frost this Morning more severe than Yesterday. It froze the Chamber Pots above Stairs.[20]

Simplified Woodforde family tree edit

This simplified tree is meant to help the reader of the Diary. It is mainly built up from the Brief Biographies added by D. Hughes at the end of his diary selection.[21]

The artist Samuel Woodforde, one of James Woodforde's nephews, was a member of the Royal Academy.

Simplified Woodforde family tree
  • Samuel Woodforde, divine, poet and founding member of the Royal Society (1636–1701)    +    Alice Beale (? – 1664)
    • Heighes Woodforde, rector of Epsom (Surrey) (1664–1724)    +    Mary Lamport, heiress to an estate in Sussex (? – 1742)
      • Anne Woodforde, paid companion of the Countess of Derby, unmarr. (1691–1773)
      • Samuel Woodforde, rector of Ansford and vicar of Castle Cary (Somerset) (1695–1771)    +(1724)+    Jane Collins (1706–1766)
        • Sobieski Woodforde ("Sister Clarke") (1725–1821)    +    Richard Clarke ("Dr Clarke"), physician and inoculator (? – 1785)
          • Jane Clarke ("Jenny") (1754–1836)    +    Francis Woodforde ("Frank"), rector of Ansford (Somerset) (1748 – ?)
            • descent of Francis Woodforde
          • Samuel Clarke (“Sam”), kleptomaniac (1756 – ?)
          • Anna Maria Clarke (“Nanny”), mental invalid (1759–1794)
          • Sophia Clarke (“Sophy”), eloped with her cousin (1761–1839)    +(1780)+    Robert White (? – 1831)
            • 10 children
        • Heighes Woodforde, attorney, often short of money, heir to the Sussex estate (1726–1789)    +(1754)+    Ann Dorville (1734–1799)
          • Anna Maria Woodforde ("Nancy"), companion of JW at Weston Longville (Norfolk) (1757–1830)
          • William Woodforde ("Bill"), Navy officer (1758–1844)    +(1788)+    Anne Dukes of Galhampton (Somerset) (1771–1829)
            • issue
          • Juliana Woodforde, died of tuberculosis (1760–1788)
          • Samuel Woodforde, artist, Royal Academy (1763–1817)    +(1815)+    Jane Gardner
        • Mary Woodforde ("Sister White") (1729–1804)    +    Robert White, uncle of Betsy White, whom JW wished to marry
          • Molly White (1754–1761)
          • John White ("Little Jacky"), invalid, died of an incurable disease (1755–1773)
          • James White, lawyer (1763–1791)
          • Robert White, eloped with his cousin (? – 1831)    +(1780)+    Sophia Clarke ("Sophy") (1761–1839)
            • 10 children
          • 3 other children
        • Jane Woodforde ("Jenny", "Sister Pounsett") (1734–1798)    +(1774)+    John Pounsett of Cole (Somerset) (1733–1795)
          • Jane Pounsett ("Jenny") (1775–1820)    +    Frederick Grove, clergyman
        • James Woodforde, diarist, fellow of New College (Oxford), rector of Weston Longville (Norfolk), unmarr. (1740–1803)
        • John Woodforde ("Jack"), ironmonger and debauchee (1744–1799)    +(1774)+    Melliora Clarke
      • Elizabeth Woodforde ("Aunt Parr") (1699–1771)    +    ? Parr
      • John Woodforde, rector of North Curry (Somerset) (1703 – ?)    +    Rebekah Hamilton
        • Robert Woodforde, apothecary in Bath (Somerset) (1738–1825)
        • Thomas Woodforde, physician in Taunton (Somerset) and bank partner (1743–1828)
      • Thomas Woodforde (“Uncle Tom”) (1706–1800)    +    Sarah Adams (“Aunt Tom”)
        • Francis Woodforde (“Frank”), rector of Ansford (Somerset) (1748 – ?)    +    Jane Clarke (“Jenny”) (1754–1836)
          • Frances Woodforde (“Fanny”)
          • Thomas Woodforde (“Tom”)
    • Robert Woodforde ("My uncle at Wells"), canon and treasurer of the Wells cathedral (Somerset) (1675–1762)

A remarkably detailed account of the Woodforde family exists, and is now documented online.[22]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ John Beresford, ed., Oxford University Press, 5 vols. 1924–1931.
  2. ^ Butler-Gallie, F. (2018). A Field Guide to the English Clergy. Oneworld Publications. p. 85. ISBN 978-1786074416.
  3. ^ Fielding, John (2012). The Diary of Robert Woodford, 1637–1641. Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge. p. 10. ISBN 978-1-1070-3638-3.
  4. ^ J. Beresford, The Diary of a Country Parson, Vol 1, p 11
  5. ^ Memoirs of my Life and Writings' from Lord Sheffield (ed.) Miscellaneous Works
  6. ^ G. Midgley, University Life in Eighteenth-Century Oxford, in which only Thomas Hearne's Collections, ed. C.E.Doble & H.E. Salter, 1885–1918, is more frequently quoted.
  7. ^ Waite, Vincent (1964). Portrait of the Quantocks. London: Robert Hale. ISBN 0-7091-1158-4.
  8. ^ J. Beresford, ed., The Diary of a Country Parson, Vol. 1 – entry for 14 April 1775, p. 151.
  9. ^ J. Beresford (ed.), The Diary of a Country Parson, Vol 1 – entry for 27 April 1775, p. 153.
  10. ^ R. L. Winstanley, "Woodforde, James (1740–1803)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, UK: OUP, 2004 Retrieved 4 June 2017, pay-walled.
  11. ^ Many references to the Rotation Club, beginning with entry for 13 January 1776 – see R. L. Winstanley, ed., The Diary of James Woodforde, Vol 7, 1776–1777, p. 103.
  12. ^ See Virginia Woolf, The Common Reader, Second Series, Chapter 9: Two Parsons; R. L. Hart-Davis, ed., Siegfried Sassoon: Letters to Max Beerbohm, pp. 53–57.
  13. ^ "The Diary: Parson Woodforde Society publications." The Parson Woodforde Society. Retrieved 2021-03-18.
  14. ^ E. Longmate, Woodforde's Sermons,, Parson Woodforde Society Journal, xxx, 4.
  15. ^ R.L. Winstanley (ed.), The Diary of James Woodforde, Vol. 2 (1763–1765).
  16. ^ R.L. Winstanley (ed.), The Ansford Diary of James Woodforde, Vol. 4 (1769–1771).
  17. ^ R.L. Winstanley (ed.), The Oxford & Somerset Diary of James Woodforde (1774–1775).
  18. ^ R. L. Winstanley and Peter Jameson, eds., The Diary of James Woodforde, Vol. 8 (1778–1779).
  19. ^ R. L. Winstanley and Peter Jameson, eds., The Diary of James Woodforde, Vol.11, (1785–1787)
  20. ^ Peter Jameson, ed.,The Diary of James Woodforde, Vol. 14 (1794–1795).
  21. ^ Hughes (ed.), p. 435–445.
  22. ^ "Woodforde family information and website" 16 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 19 July 2008

Sources edit

  • Beresford, John (ed.) The Diary of a Country Parson, 5 Vols. 1924–31
  • Hughes, D. (ed.), The Diary of a Country Parson: The Revd James Woodforde, 2015, The Folio Society, London.
  • Treasure, G. Who's Who in History, Vol. IV 1714–1789, 1969, ISBN 0-631-06190-8
  • Winstanley, Roy, Parson Woodforde: the Life and Times of a Country Parson, 1996, ISBN 0-948903-38-4
  • Woodforde, Dorothy Heighes (ed) Woodforde Papers and Diaries, 1932, Peter Davies, London.

External links edit

  • Works by James Woodforde at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Parson Woodforde Society – Society dedicated to studying Woodforde's life

james, woodforde, confused, with, james, woodford, 1740, 1803, english, clergyman, mainly, somerset, norfolk, remembered, author, diary, country, parson, this, vivid, account, parish, life, remained, unpublished, until, 20th, century, revd, nephew, samuel, woo. Not to be confused with James Woodford James Woodforde 1740 1803 was an English clergyman mainly in Somerset and Norfolk remembered as the author of The Diary of a Country Parson This vivid account of parish life remained unpublished until the 20th century 1 The Revd James WoodfordeJames Woodforde by his nephew Samuel WoodfordeBorn1740Ansford SomersetDied1803Weston Longville NorfolkNationalityEnglishEducationWinchester CollegeOriel amp New College OxfordOccupationClergymanKnown forDiaristParent s Revd Samuel and Jane Woodforde Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Writings 4 Simplified Woodforde family tree 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksEarly life editJames Woodforde was born at the Parsonage Ansford Somerset England on 27 June 1740 In adulthood he led an uneventful unambitious life as a clergyman of the Church of England a life unremarkable except that for nearly 45 years he kept a diary recording the everyday routines and concerns of 18th century rural England 2 A descendant of the noted 17th century diarist Robert Woodford of Northampton 3 he was the sixth child of the Reverend Samuel Woodforde rector of Ansford and vicar of Castle Cary and his wife Jane Collins James was one of four brothers one of whom died in infancy and the only one to attend public school Winchester College and university Oxford He was admitted to Winchester as a scholar in 1752 and enrolled at Oriel College Oxford in 1758 migrating to New College in the following year His diary begins with the entry for 21 July 1759 Made a Scholar of New College 4 Woodforde was ordained and graduated BA in 1763 became MA in 1767 and BD in 1775 He appears to have been a competent but uninspired student and the portrait he provides of Oxford during his two periods of residence as scholar and fellow 1758 1763 and 1773 1776 only confirm Edward Gibbon s famously damning opinion that it was a place where the dons dull and deep potations excuse the brisk intemperance of youth 5 The diary is a rich source of information on university life in 18th century Oxford 6 Career editUpon leaving the university in 1763 Woodforde returned to Somerset where he worked as a curate mostly for his father for ten years From October 1763 to January 1764 he was the curate at Thurloxton 7 This period of his life under represented in Beresford s abridged edition of the Diary is thickly peopled with memorable characters from all strata of society many of them immortalised with nicknames Peter Cherry Ripe Coles Mumper Clarke Riddle Tucker The extended Woodforde family including James s frequently drunken brothers figure prominently in these Somerset years nbsp All Saints Church Weston Longville in 2001 On his father s death in 1771 James failed to succeed to his parishes and likewise failed to win or rather retain the heart of Betsy White a mere Jilt He returned to Oxford where he became sub warden of his college and a pro proctor of the university He was unsuccessful in his application to become headmaster of Bedford School but in 1773 he was presented to the living of Weston Longville in Norfolk one of the best in the gift of the college being worth 400 a year He took up residence at Weston in May 1776 Despite the wrench of leaving family and friends he quickly settled down to a comfortable bachelor existence He thought Norwich the fairest City in England by far 8 and always enjoyed a trip to the sweet beach at Yarmouth 9 He was soon joined by his niece Anna Maria Nancy as housekeeper and companion who stayed with him until he died She also was a diarist and correspondent 10 In Norfolk his social life was more limited but he enjoyed the fellowship of the local clergy who took it in turns to entertain one another to dinner our Rotation Club 11 Because he always recorded what was provided for dinner which very occasionally was an elaborate banquet he is often wrongly characterised as a glutton Among the gentry in the 18th century it was a matter of pride to provide a variety of dishes Because Woodforde recorded them all does not mean that he ate from them all Allegedly advised to do so by his father Woodforde also provides a meticulous record of his accounts The daily entries are also accompanied by weather notes The diary provides a wonderfully full account of the small community in which the diarist lived of the births and deaths comings and goings illnesses and annual celebrations The diary not only covers the Squire and his Relations but also the rector s servants the farmers and labourers carpenter and innkeeper parish clerk and many others As a churchman Woodforde himself was conscientious by the standards of his time charitable and pious without being sanctimonious and again typical of his day deeply suspicious of enthusiasm The value of the diary to the historian lies in the wealth of primary source material it provides while the general reader can bring from it the authentic flavour of 18th century English country life A display about his life and writings is available in the Castle Cary and District Museum in Somerset Writings editThe Revd James Woodforde was one of several Woodforde diarists His niece Nancy and his nephew Bill s three daughters all kept diaries as did a number of his predecessors for instance his great great grandfather Robert Woodford of Northampton 1606 1654 The five volume edition of the diary has one flaw it is only a selection and unaware of how popular it would prove with Virginia Woolf Max Beerbohm and Siegfried Sassoon among many thousands more Beresford selected his first volume from nearly half of the entire Diary 12 The subsequent volumes each covering between four and six years are more complete A definitive edition has been published by the Parson Woodforde Society 13 The MS Diary consisting of 72 notebooks and 100 loose sheets is deposited in the Bodleian Library Oxford citation needed Whilst Woodforde s sermon style has been described by a leading authority as formal competent thorough and scholarly with a wide vocabulary 14 his diary writing style is simple straightforward informal and even homely The following extracts give something of their flavour 11 Jan 1763 Went on the River again this Morning a skating and I have improved in the out Stroke a good deal I was on the Ice from 12 this Morning till 5 this Afternoon and I gave a Fellow for putting on my Skates and sometimes altering then 0 0 2 15 13 Nov 1769 We had News this Morning of Mr Wilkes gaining his Point against Lord Halifax and 400 Pounds Damages given him Cary amp Ansford Bells rung most part of the Day on the Occasion 16 14 April 1775 We breakfasted dined suppd amp slept at Norwich We took a Walk over the city in the morning amp we both agreed it was the fairest City in England by far 17 1 Jan 1779 This morning very early about 1 o clock a most dreadful Storm of Wind with Hail amp Snow happened here and the Wind did not quite abait till the Evening A little before 2 o clock I got up my bedstead rocking under me and never in my Life that I know of did I remember the Wind so high or of so long continuance I expected every Moment that some Part or other of my House must have been blown down but blessed be God the whole stood only a few Tiles displaced My Chancel received great Damage as did my Barn the Leads from my Chancel were almost all blown up with some Parts of the Roof the North West Window blown in amp smashed all to pieces 18 25 Dec 1786 It being Christmas Day I had the following old men dine at my House on roast beef amp plumb Pudding and after Dinner half a Pint of strong ale and a shilling to each to carry home to their Wives Richd Buck Thos Cushing Thos Cary Thos Carr Nathaniel Heavers John Buckman and my Clerk Js Smith 19 25 Jan 1795 We breakfasted dined amp c again at home The frost this Morning more severe than Yesterday It froze the Chamber Pots above Stairs 20 Simplified Woodforde family tree editThis simplified tree is meant to help the reader of the Diary It is mainly built up from the Brief Biographies added by D Hughes at the end of his diary selection 21 The artist Samuel Woodforde one of James Woodforde s nephews was a member of the Royal Academy Simplified Woodforde family treeSamuel Woodforde divine poet and founding member of theRoyal Society 1636 1701 Alice Beale 1664 Heighes Woodforde rector of Epsom Surrey 1664 1724 Mary Lamport heiress to an estate in Sussex 1742 Anne Woodforde paid companion of the Countess of Derby unmarr 1691 1773 Samuel Woodforde rector of Ansford and vicar of Castle Cary Somerset 1695 1771 1724 Jane Collins 1706 1766 Sobieski Woodforde Sister Clarke 1725 1821 Richard Clarke Dr Clarke physician and inoculator 1785 Jane Clarke Jenny 1754 1836 Francis Woodforde Frank rector of Ansford Somerset 1748 descent of Francis Woodforde Samuel Clarke Sam kleptomaniac 1756 Anna Maria Clarke Nanny mental invalid 1759 1794 Sophia Clarke Sophy eloped with her cousin 1761 1839 1780 Robert White 1831 10 children Heighes Woodforde attorney often short of money heir to the Sussex estate 1726 1789 1754 Ann Dorville 1734 1799 Anna Maria Woodforde Nancy companion of JW at Weston Longville Norfolk 1757 1830 William Woodforde Bill Navy officer 1758 1844 1788 Anne Dukes of Galhampton Somerset 1771 1829 issue Juliana Woodforde died of tuberculosis 1760 1788 Samuel Woodforde artist Royal Academy 1763 1817 1815 Jane Gardner Mary Woodforde Sister White 1729 1804 Robert White uncle of Betsy White whom JW wished to marry Molly White 1754 1761 John White Little Jacky invalid died of an incurable disease 1755 1773 James White lawyer 1763 1791 Robert White eloped with his cousin 1831 1780 Sophia Clarke Sophy 1761 1839 10 children 3 other children Jane Woodforde Jenny Sister Pounsett 1734 1798 1774 John Pounsett of Cole Somerset 1733 1795 Jane Pounsett Jenny 1775 1820 Frederick Grove clergyman James Woodforde diarist fellowof New College Oxford rector of Weston Longville Norfolk unmarr 1740 1803 John Woodforde Jack ironmonger and debauchee 1744 1799 1774 Melliora Clarke Elizabeth Woodforde Aunt Parr 1699 1771 Parr John Woodforde rector of North Curry Somerset 1703 Rebekah Hamilton Robert Woodforde apothecary in Bath Somerset 1738 1825 Thomas Woodforde physician in Taunton Somerset and bank partner 1743 1828 Thomas Woodforde Uncle Tom 1706 1800 Sarah Adams Aunt Tom Francis Woodforde Frank rector of Ansford Somerset 1748 Jane Clarke Jenny 1754 1836 Frances Woodforde Fanny Thomas Woodforde Tom Robert Woodforde My uncle at Wells canon and treasurer of the Wells cathedral Somerset 1675 1762 A remarkably detailed account of the Woodforde family exists and is now documented online 22 See also editMary Hardy diarist Parson naturalistReferences edit John Beresford ed Oxford University Press 5 vols 1924 1931 Butler Gallie F 2018 A Field Guide to the English Clergy Oneworld Publications p 85 ISBN 978 1786074416 Fielding John 2012 The Diary of Robert Woodford 1637 1641 Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge p 10 ISBN 978 1 1070 3638 3 J Beresford The Diary of a Country Parson Vol 1 p 11 Memoirs of my Life and Writings from Lord Sheffield ed Miscellaneous Works G Midgley University Life in Eighteenth Century Oxford in which only Thomas Hearne s Collections ed C E Doble amp H E Salter 1885 1918 is more frequently quoted Waite Vincent 1964 Portrait of the Quantocks London Robert Hale ISBN 0 7091 1158 4 J Beresford ed The Diary of a Country Parson Vol 1 entry for 14 April 1775 p 151 J Beresford ed The Diary of a Country Parson Vol 1 entry for 27 April 1775 p 153 R L Winstanley Woodforde James 1740 1803 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford UK OUP 2004 Retrieved 4 June 2017 pay walled Many references to the Rotation Club beginning with entry for 13 January 1776 see R L Winstanley ed The Diary of James Woodforde Vol 7 1776 1777 p 103 See Virginia Woolf The Common Reader Second Series Chapter 9 Two Parsons R L Hart Davis ed Siegfried Sassoon Letters to Max Beerbohm pp 53 57 The Diary Parson Woodforde Society publications The Parson Woodforde Society Retrieved 2021 03 18 E Longmate Woodforde s Sermons Parson Woodforde Society Journal xxx 4 R L Winstanley ed The Diary of James Woodforde Vol 2 1763 1765 R L Winstanley ed The Ansford Diary of James Woodforde Vol 4 1769 1771 R L Winstanley ed The Oxford amp Somerset Diary of James Woodforde 1774 1775 R L Winstanley and Peter Jameson eds The Diary of James Woodforde Vol 8 1778 1779 R L Winstanley and Peter Jameson eds The Diary of James Woodforde Vol 11 1785 1787 Peter Jameson ed The Diary of James Woodforde Vol 14 1794 1795 Hughes ed p 435 445 Woodforde family information and website Archived 16 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 19 July 2008Sources editBeresford John ed The Diary of a Country Parson 5 Vols 1924 31 Hughes D ed The Diary of a Country Parson The Revd James Woodforde 2015 The Folio Society London Treasure G Who s Who in History Vol IV 1714 1789 1969 ISBN 0 631 06190 8 Winstanley Roy Parson Woodforde the Life and Times of a Country Parson 1996 ISBN 0 948903 38 4 Woodforde Dorothy Heighes ed Woodforde Papers and Diaries 1932 Peter Davies London External links editWorks by James Woodforde at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Parson Woodforde Society Society dedicated to studying Woodforde s life Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James Woodforde amp oldid 1219181312, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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