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Ofspring Blackall

Ofspring Blackall (26 April 1655 (baptised) – 29 November 1716), Bishop of Exeter and religious controversialist, was born in London.


Ofspring Blackall
Bishop of Exeter
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseExeter
Installed1708
Term ended1716
PredecessorJonathan Trelawny
SuccessorLancelot Blackburne
Other post(s)Rector of St Antholin's, London
Rector of South Ockendon, Essex
Rector of St Mary Aldermary
Orders
Ordination11 March 1676-7
Personal details
Born(1655-04-26)26 April 1655
London, Middlesex, England
Died29 November 1716(1716-11-29) (aged 61)
Exeter, Devon, England
BuriedExeter Cathedral
NationalityEnglish
DenominationChurch of England
ResidenceExeter
ParentsThomas Blackall, Martha Ofspring
SpouseAnne Dillingham
ChildrenTheophilus, John, Charles Ofspring, Elizabeth, Ann, Mary, and Jane
Alma materSt Catharine's College, Cambridge

Early life and education Edit

Baptized on 26 April 1655 at St Gregory by Paul's, he was the son of Thomas Blackall (bapt. 1621; died 1688), freeman of the Haberdashers' Company and later alderman of the City of London, and his wife, Martha (bapt. 1625; d. 1701?), daughter of Charles Ofspring, rector of St Antholin, Budge Row, and trier of the second presbyterian classis (or eldership) of London. Blackall's father owned land in several counties as well as property in the city,[1] and although he conformed to the established church may have retained some puritan sympathies.

During Blackall's youth his parents resided in Lordshold Manor, an 'ancient brick house' in Dalston, Middlesex (VCH Middlesex, 10.89).[2] He was educated in nearby Hackney, perhaps at the free school of which Robert Skingle was master, before being admitted as a pensioner to St Catharine's College, Cambridge, on 26 April 1671.[3] He graduated BA in 1675, proceeded MA in 1678, and was elected in 1679 (by the interest, it was rumoured, of William Wake) to a fellowship, which he resigned in 1687. He was ordained deacon on 11 March 1677 and priest on 19 December 1680. The university awarded him the degree of DD in 1700.

Cleric Edit

On 14 January 1690 Blackall was instituted to the rectory of South Ockendon, Essex; he resigned this for the rectory of St Mary Aldermary,[4] London, to which he was presented by the dean and chapter of St Paul's on 6 November 1694. He also held the city lectureships of St Olave Jewry from 1695 to 1698, and St Dunstan-in-the-West from 1698. He was appointed chaplain to William and Mary, although it was later alleged that he had been a nonjuror and had refused to swear allegiance to the new monarchs for two years.

Blackall was nominated to the bishopric of Exeter by the personal determination of Queen Anne,[4] upon the recommendation of John Sharp, archbishop of York, but without the knowledge of her ministers, whose politically expedient recommendations the queen, mindful of the royal prerogative, deemed insufficiently orthodox. It was consequently remarked wittily that he was the 'queen's bishop'. He was consecrated at Lambeth on 8 February 1708.[5] To supplement his episcopal revenues he was permitted to hold, in addition to his bishopric, the deanery of St Buryan, Cornwall, the rectory of Shorbrook, Devon, and the offices of archdeacon and treasurer of Exeter. He was a diligent bishop in his diocese, and he was also instrumental in the institution of charity schools in Exeter.[6] He lived to see the establishment of two such schools for boys and two for girls, of fifty pupils each.

Blackall was consecrated a bishop at Lambeth on 8 February, 1708 by the Bishop of London.[7] By a strange twist of fate, Sir William Dawes was on the same date consecrated a bishop at nearby Westminster by the Bishop of Winchester. Dawes later edited and published a posthumous two-volume edition of Blackall's sermons.

Public life and works Edit

Blackall came to public prominence in 1699 when he engaged in a controversy with the Irish deist and pamphleteer John Toland. In his Life of John Milton (1699), Toland had disputed Charles I's authorship of Eikon Basilike. In a brief aside Toland remarked that if such a recent deception could remain undiscovered, it was not surprising that the dubious authorship of some ancient Christian writings had likewise gone undetected. Blackall understood that Toland had slyly insinuated that parts of the New Testament were forgeries. In a sermon before the House of Commons on 30 January 1699, Blackall called on the Commons to act against this denial of the authenticity of the revelation of God, which if left unchecked would undermine public morality as well as Christian doctrine. Toland replied with Amyntor, or, A Defence of Milton's Life (1699), which attacked Blackall in a highly personal manner and accused him of theological ignorance. Toland disingenuously claimed he had disputed the authenticity not of the New Testament, but of 'spurious' apocryphal Christian works, of which he provided an extensive catalogue. Blackall's response, Mr Blackall's Reasons for not Replying to a Book Lately Published Entitled Amyntor (1699), ably demonstrated that Toland's words should most naturally have been taken to have referred to the New Testament, but Blackall nevertheless acknowledged Toland's apparent retraction. Blackall's altercation with Toland had brought him to prominence as a defender of revealed religion against the attacks of the deists. Consequently, he was chosen to deliver the Boyle Lectures in 1700.[8] These consisted of seven sermons, which he preached at St Paul's Cathedral, on the theme 'The sufficiency of a standing revelation'.[9]

Ten years after his exchange with Toland, Blackall found himself embroiled in controversy again, this time with a fellow clergyman. On 8 March 1709, the anniversary of Queen Anne's accession, Blackall preached a sermon before the queen in St James's Chapel, on the text Romans 13:4. It was later published, with the title The Divine Institution of Magistracy (1709). Its themes echoed those of a sermon which Blackall had preached on the same occasion in 1705, at St Dunstan's, and which had also been published. It was a strong attack on the doctrines of popular sovereignty and the right of resistance, in which Blackall maintained that the magistrate's authority was a 'Portion of the Divine Authority ... entrusted with him by God' (p. 3). It also maintained the independent jure divino basis of clerical authority in spiritual matters. Benjamin Hoadly, in Some Considerations Humbly Offered to the … Bishop of Exeter (1709), took offence to both sermons, which, he alleged, condemned the revolution of 1688–9. Hoadly claimed that the revolution had involved resistance to James II, but that such resistance was justified by the necessity of self-preservation. Blackall, in The Lord Bishop of Exeter's Answer to Mr Hoadly's Letter, dismissed Hoadly's premise that civil authority derived from an original contract. He undertook to reply again to Hoadly only if he kept to issues of scriptural interpretation, and avoided speculations concerning matters such as an alleged 'State of Nature' about which the scriptures were silent. Hoadly's subsequent Humble Reply failed to comply with Blackall's conditions, and he did not therefore respond to it. The numerous pamphlets which were published on either side during the ensuing controversy included an anonymous work in support of Blackall, entitled The Best Answer Ever was Made (1709), by the Irish nonjuror and formidable controversialist Charles Leslie. As Blackall was by now a bishop, Hoadly's attack on him was later cited to justify the forthright treatment Hoadly received in the Bangorian controversy, after he himself had been elevated to the episcopal bench.

Ironically Blackall's same accession-day sermon of 1705, The Subjects Duty, had been attacked on its first publication by tory patriarchalist writers, who accused him of being a republican. The anonymous work An essay upon government: wherein the republican schemes reviv'd by Mr. Lock, Dr. Blackal &c. are fairly consider'd and refuted (1705), as well as linking Blackall's name with that of John Locke, took Blackall to task for contending that the precise form of government in any nation was a matter of human, and not divine, institution. Blackall suffered further abuse in a pamphlet entitled Dr Blackall's Offspring (1705).

Despite being attacked from both sides Blackall was considered by contemporaries to have distinct high church and tory principles. Gilbert Burnet went so far as to judge that, although Blackall claimed to be loyal to the government, 'his notions were all on the other side', that is, the Jacobite side, and that he 'seemed to condemn the Revolution, and all that had been done pursuant to it'.[10] In fact Blackall was a consistent 'revolution tory' and maintained the high-church doctrines of passive obedience and non-resistance to sovereign powers, while denying the Filmerian tenet of divine hereditary right. By holding that sovereignty was always absolute, but that it belonged in the English constitution to the monarch in parliament, Blackall was articulating an important theory by which tories reconciled themselves to the revolution.

Sermons Edit

During his lifetime Blackall's reputation as a preacher was considerable, and his Works were published after his death (2 vols., 1723, edited by Blackall's friend, William Dawes). His major literary work was a series of 87 sermons issued as Discourses on the Sermon on the Mount. These sermons are both expository and pastoral, and in an uncomplicated style; but receded into relative obscurity.

  • 1708. Blackall, Offspring. The rules and measures of alms-giving, and the manifold advantages of charity schools. A sermon preach'd at St. Peter's in Exeter, 26 September 1708. First preach'd, and now printed, to promote the setting up of charity schools, for the instruction and education of the children of the poor in that city, and other paces in the diocess. By Offspring, Lord Bishop of Exon. To which is added, his letter to the clergy of his diocess, upon the same subject. – Exon : printed by Sam. Farley, for Phil. Bishop, 1708. – 32p; 4°. – *WSL; Dredge p. 42; Plymouth Athenaeum p. 50; Plymouth Public Library L2897; DUL 4764; Devon & Exeter Institution, appendix, p. 127.[11]
  • The divine institution of magistracy, and the gracious design of its institution. A sermon preach'd before the Queen, at St. James's, on Tuesday, 8 March. 1708. … By Ofspring Lord Bishop of Exon. … – London: printed by J. R. for W. Rogers, 1709.. – 24p.; 8+.[12]

Family life Edit

Blackall married Anne Dillingham of London (died 1762), probably the daughter of Theophilus and Elizabeth Dillingham. Seven of their children—Theophilus, John, Charles Ofspring, Elizabeth, Ann, Mary, and Jane—survived the death of their father on 29 November 1716 in Exeter. Blackall had fallen from a horse in the spring of that year, and as a consequence he suffered a long and painful illness during which he developed gangrene. An earnest account of Blackall's life and death, and particularly of the sufferings of his final illness, can be found in William Dawes's preface to Blackall's Works. Blackall was buried on 2 December in Exeter Cathedral, on the south side of the choir. In accordance with his will, no funeral sermon was preached, and his grave was not marked by any monument or inscription. His will was proved on 26 January 1717.[13] He was granted Arms.

His grandson, John Blackall, sixth son of Ofspring's son Theophilius, was a prominent physician and Mayor of Exeter, and John's son (Ofsping's great grandson) Thomas Blackall was the holder of Spitchwick manor and builder of Dr Blackall's Drive.

References Edit

  1. ^ Bristol City Archives: Property deeds of the Hawkins family, relating to Bristol, Iron Acton, Winford, Wedmore etc.[permanent dead link] (with linked image)
  2. ^ British History Online: 'Hackney', The Environs of London: volume 2: County of Middlesex (1795), pp. 450–516.
  3. ^ "Blackall, Ofspring (BLKL671O)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  4. ^ a b "Blackall, Ofspring (1685–1785) (CCEd Person ID 35455)". The Clergy of the Church of England Database 1540–1835. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  5. ^ Nichols, John Gough, ed. (1858). The Topographer and Genealogist, Volume 3, p. 267, at Google Books, p. 267.
  6. ^ Addleshaw, Percy (1898). Bell's Cathedrals: The Cathedral Church of Exeter. London: G. Bell and Sons, Ltd.
  7. ^ St. Catherine's College by George Forrest Brown, p. 161.
  8. ^ The Boyle Lectures (1692–1732): A Defence of Natural and Revealed Religion, being an Abridgement of the Sermons preached at the Lectures founded by Robert Boyle. edited by Gilbert Burnet
  9. ^ Hunter, William Bridges (1983). A Milton Encyclopedia, Vol. 8 (Sm–Z), p. 69, at Google Books, p. 69. Lewisburg, Pennsylvania: Bucknell University Press.
  10. ^ Bishop Burnet's History of his Own Time, ed. G. Burnet and T. Burnet, 2 vols., 1724–34, 2.488
  11. ^ Exeter Working Papers in Book History
  12. ^ Catalogue 18 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine Innerpeffray Library
  13. ^ National Archives: Online Document PROB 11/1016

Attribution Edit

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain"Blackall, Offspring". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.

External links Edit

Bibliography Edit

Biographies Edit

  • , Lives of the Bishops of Exeter by the Reverend George Oliver D.D. (1861)

Archival documents Edit

Portraits Edit

ofspring, blackall, april, 1655, baptised, november, 1716, bishop, exeter, religious, controversialist, born, london, right, reverendbishop, exeterprovincecanterburydioceseexeterinstalled1708term, ended1716predecessorjonathan, trelawnysuccessorlancelot, blackb. Ofspring Blackall 26 April 1655 baptised 29 November 1716 Bishop of Exeter and religious controversialist was born in London The Right ReverendOfspring BlackallBishop of ExeterProvinceCanterburyDioceseExeterInstalled1708Term ended1716PredecessorJonathan TrelawnySuccessorLancelot BlackburneOther post s Rector of St Antholin s LondonRector of South Ockendon EssexRector of St Mary AldermaryOrdersOrdination11 March 1676 7Personal detailsBorn 1655 04 26 26 April 1655London Middlesex EnglandDied29 November 1716 1716 11 29 aged 61 Exeter Devon EnglandBuriedExeter CathedralNationalityEnglishDenominationChurch of EnglandResidenceExeterParentsThomas Blackall Martha OfspringSpouseAnne DillinghamChildrenTheophilus John Charles Ofspring Elizabeth Ann Mary and JaneAlma materSt Catharine s College Cambridge Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Cleric 3 Public life and works 3 1 Sermons 4 Family life 5 References 5 1 Attribution 6 External links 6 1 Bibliography 6 2 Biographies 6 3 Archival documents 6 4 PortraitsEarly life and education EditBaptized on 26 April 1655 at St Gregory by Paul s he was the son of Thomas Blackall bapt 1621 died 1688 freeman of the Haberdashers Company and later alderman of the City of London and his wife Martha bapt 1625 d 1701 daughter of Charles Ofspring rector of St Antholin Budge Row and trier of the second presbyterian classis or eldership of London Blackall s father owned land in several counties as well as property in the city 1 and although he conformed to the established church may have retained some puritan sympathies During Blackall s youth his parents resided in Lordshold Manor an ancient brick house in Dalston Middlesex VCH Middlesex 10 89 2 He was educated in nearby Hackney perhaps at the free school of which Robert Skingle was master before being admitted as a pensioner to St Catharine s College Cambridge on 26 April 1671 3 He graduated BA in 1675 proceeded MA in 1678 and was elected in 1679 by the interest it was rumoured of William Wake to a fellowship which he resigned in 1687 He was ordained deacon on 11 March 1677 and priest on 19 December 1680 The university awarded him the degree of DD in 1700 Cleric EditOn 14 January 1690 Blackall was instituted to the rectory of South Ockendon Essex he resigned this for the rectory of St Mary Aldermary 4 London to which he was presented by the dean and chapter of St Paul s on 6 November 1694 He also held the city lectureships of St Olave Jewry from 1695 to 1698 and St Dunstan in the West from 1698 He was appointed chaplain to William and Mary although it was later alleged that he had been a nonjuror and had refused to swear allegiance to the new monarchs for two years Blackall was nominated to the bishopric of Exeter by the personal determination of Queen Anne 4 upon the recommendation of John Sharp archbishop of York but without the knowledge of her ministers whose politically expedient recommendations the queen mindful of the royal prerogative deemed insufficiently orthodox It was consequently remarked wittily that he was the queen s bishop He was consecrated at Lambeth on 8 February 1708 5 To supplement his episcopal revenues he was permitted to hold in addition to his bishopric the deanery of St Buryan Cornwall the rectory of Shorbrook Devon and the offices of archdeacon and treasurer of Exeter He was a diligent bishop in his diocese and he was also instrumental in the institution of charity schools in Exeter 6 He lived to see the establishment of two such schools for boys and two for girls of fifty pupils each Blackall was consecrated a bishop at Lambeth on 8 February 1708 by the Bishop of London 7 By a strange twist of fate Sir William Dawes was on the same date consecrated a bishop at nearby Westminster by the Bishop of Winchester Dawes later edited and published a posthumous two volume edition of Blackall s sermons Public life and works EditBlackall came to public prominence in 1699 when he engaged in a controversy with the Irish deist and pamphleteer John Toland In his Life of John Milton 1699 Toland had disputed Charles I s authorship of Eikon Basilike In a brief aside Toland remarked that if such a recent deception could remain undiscovered it was not surprising that the dubious authorship of some ancient Christian writings had likewise gone undetected Blackall understood that Toland had slyly insinuated that parts of the New Testament were forgeries In a sermon before the House of Commons on 30 January 1699 Blackall called on the Commons to act against this denial of the authenticity of the revelation of God which if left unchecked would undermine public morality as well as Christian doctrine Toland replied with Amyntor or A Defence of Milton s Life 1699 which attacked Blackall in a highly personal manner and accused him of theological ignorance Toland disingenuously claimed he had disputed the authenticity not of the New Testament but of spurious apocryphal Christian works of which he provided an extensive catalogue Blackall s response Mr Blackall s Reasons for not Replying to a Book Lately Published Entitled Amyntor 1699 ably demonstrated that Toland s words should most naturally have been taken to have referred to the New Testament but Blackall nevertheless acknowledged Toland s apparent retraction Blackall s altercation with Toland had brought him to prominence as a defender of revealed religion against the attacks of the deists Consequently he was chosen to deliver the Boyle Lectures in 1700 8 These consisted of seven sermons which he preached at St Paul s Cathedral on the theme The sufficiency of a standing revelation 9 Ten years after his exchange with Toland Blackall found himself embroiled in controversy again this time with a fellow clergyman On 8 March 1709 the anniversary of Queen Anne s accession Blackall preached a sermon before the queen in St James s Chapel on the text Romans 13 4 It was later published with the title The Divine Institution of Magistracy 1709 Its themes echoed those of a sermon which Blackall had preached on the same occasion in 1705 at St Dunstan s and which had also been published It was a strong attack on the doctrines of popular sovereignty and the right of resistance in which Blackall maintained that the magistrate s authority was a Portion of the Divine Authority entrusted with him by God p 3 It also maintained the independent jure divino basis of clerical authority in spiritual matters Benjamin Hoadly in Some Considerations Humbly Offered to the Bishop of Exeter 1709 took offence to both sermons which he alleged condemned the revolution of 1688 9 Hoadly claimed that the revolution had involved resistance to James II but that such resistance was justified by the necessity of self preservation Blackall in The Lord Bishop of Exeter s Answer to Mr Hoadly s Letter dismissed Hoadly s premise that civil authority derived from an original contract He undertook to reply again to Hoadly only if he kept to issues of scriptural interpretation and avoided speculations concerning matters such as an alleged State of Nature about which the scriptures were silent Hoadly s subsequent Humble Reply failed to comply with Blackall s conditions and he did not therefore respond to it The numerous pamphlets which were published on either side during the ensuing controversy included an anonymous work in support of Blackall entitled The Best Answer Ever was Made 1709 by the Irish nonjuror and formidable controversialist Charles Leslie As Blackall was by now a bishop Hoadly s attack on him was later cited to justify the forthright treatment Hoadly received in the Bangorian controversy after he himself had been elevated to the episcopal bench Ironically Blackall s same accession day sermon of 1705 The Subjects Duty had been attacked on its first publication by tory patriarchalist writers who accused him of being a republican The anonymous work An essay upon government wherein the republican schemes reviv d by Mr Lock Dr Blackal amp c are fairly consider d and refuted 1705 as well as linking Blackall s name with that of John Locke took Blackall to task for contending that the precise form of government in any nation was a matter of human and not divine institution Blackall suffered further abuse in a pamphlet entitled Dr Blackall s Offspring 1705 Despite being attacked from both sides Blackall was considered by contemporaries to have distinct high church and tory principles Gilbert Burnet went so far as to judge that although Blackall claimed to be loyal to the government his notions were all on the other side that is the Jacobite side and that he seemed to condemn the Revolution and all that had been done pursuant to it 10 In fact Blackall was a consistent revolution tory and maintained the high church doctrines of passive obedience and non resistance to sovereign powers while denying the Filmerian tenet of divine hereditary right By holding that sovereignty was always absolute but that it belonged in the English constitution to the monarch in parliament Blackall was articulating an important theory by which tories reconciled themselves to the revolution Sermons Edit During his lifetime Blackall s reputation as a preacher was considerable and his Works were published after his death 2 vols 1723 edited by Blackall s friend William Dawes His major literary work was a series of 87 sermons issued as Discourses on the Sermon on the Mount These sermons are both expository and pastoral and in an uncomplicated style but receded into relative obscurity 1708 Blackall Offspring The rules and measures of alms giving and the manifold advantages of charity schools A sermon preach d at St Peter s in Exeter 26 September 1708 First preach d and now printed to promote the setting up of charity schools for the instruction and education of the children of the poor in that city and other paces in the diocess By Offspring Lord Bishop of Exon To which is added his letter to the clergy of his diocess upon the same subject Exon printed by Sam Farley for Phil Bishop 1708 32p 4 WSL Dredge p 42 Plymouth Athenaeum p 50 Plymouth Public Library L2897 DUL 4764 Devon amp Exeter Institution appendix p 127 11 The divine institution of magistracy and the gracious design of its institution A sermon preach d before the Queen at St James s on Tuesday 8 March 1708 By Ofspring Lord Bishop of Exon London printed by J R for W Rogers 1709 24p 8 12 Family life EditBlackall married Anne Dillingham of London died 1762 probably the daughter of Theophilus and Elizabeth Dillingham Seven of their children Theophilus John Charles Ofspring Elizabeth Ann Mary and Jane survived the death of their father on 29 November 1716 in Exeter Blackall had fallen from a horse in the spring of that year and as a consequence he suffered a long and painful illness during which he developed gangrene An earnest account of Blackall s life and death and particularly of the sufferings of his final illness can be found in William Dawes s preface to Blackall s Works Blackall was buried on 2 December in Exeter Cathedral on the south side of the choir In accordance with his will no funeral sermon was preached and his grave was not marked by any monument or inscription His will was proved on 26 January 1717 13 He was granted Arms His grandson John Blackall sixth son of Ofspring s son Theophilius was a prominent physician and Mayor of Exeter and John s son Ofsping s great grandson Thomas Blackall was the holder of Spitchwick manor and builder of Dr Blackall s Drive References Edit Bristol City Archives Property deeds of the Hawkins family relating to Bristol Iron Acton Winford Wedmore etc permanent dead link with linked image British History Online Hackney The Environs of London volume 2 County of Middlesex 1795 pp 450 516 Blackall Ofspring BLKL671O A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge a b Blackall Ofspring 1685 1785 CCEd Person ID 35455 The Clergy of the Church of England Database 1540 1835 Retrieved 2 February 2014 Nichols John Gough ed 1858 The Topographer and Genealogist Volume 3 p 267 at Google Books p 267 Addleshaw Percy 1898 Bell s Cathedrals The Cathedral Church of Exeter London G Bell and Sons Ltd St Catherine s College by George Forrest Brown p 161 The Boyle Lectures 1692 1732 A Defence of Natural and Revealed Religion being an Abridgement of the Sermons preached at the Lectures founded by Robert Boyle edited by Gilbert Burnet Hunter William Bridges 1983 A Milton Encyclopedia Vol 8 Sm Z p 69 at Google Books p 69 Lewisburg Pennsylvania Bucknell University Press Bishop Burnet s History of his Own Time ed G Burnet and T Burnet 2 vols 1724 34 2 488 Exeter Working Papers in Book History Catalogue Archived 18 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine Innerpeffray Library National Archives Online Document PROB 11 1016 Attribution Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Blackall Offspring Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 External links EditBibliography Edit Bibliographic directory from Project CanterburyBiographies Edit Offspring Blackall Lives of the Bishops of Exeter by the Reverend George Oliver D D 1861 Archival documents Edit Ofspring OR Offspring Blackall search at The National Archives National Church Institutions Database of Manuscripts and Archives permanent dead link contains related information on manuscript and archive collections held at Lambeth Palace Library LPL and the Church of England Record Centre CERC Portraits Edit National Portrait Gallery London Portraits of Offspring Blackall Blackhall Devon Libraries Local Studies Service The Rt Reverend Dr Ofspring Blackall late Ld Bishop of Exeter Biography portalChurch of England titlesPreceded byJonathan Trelawny Bishop of Exeter1708 1716 Succeeded byLancelot Blackburne Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ofspring Blackall amp oldid 1150257781, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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