fbpx
Wikipedia

St Augustine's College (Kent)

St Augustine’s College in Canterbury, Kent, United Kingdom, was located within the precincts of St Augustine's Abbey about 0.2 miles (335 metres) ESE of Canterbury Cathedral. It served first as a missionary college of the Church of England (1848–1947) and later as the Central College of the Anglican Communion (1952–1967).[2]

Abbot Fyndon's Great Gate, previously used by the Abbey and both Colleges, is now a private entrance into the King’s School. The public entrance to the abbey ruins is on Longport.[1]
Ruins of St Augustine’s Abbey with a college building in the mid-background and Canterbury Cathedral in the far-background

Missionary college edit

 
The former chapell

The mid-19th century witnessed a "mass-migration" from England to its colonies. In response, the Church of England sent clergy, but the demand for them to serve overseas exceeded supply.[3] Colonial bishoprics were established, but the bishops were without clergy. The training of missionary clergy for the colonies was “notoriously difficult” because they were required to have not only “piety and desire”, they were required to have an education “equivalent to that of a university degree”. The founding of the missionary college of St Augustine’s provided a solution to this problem.[4]

The Revd Edward Coleridge, a teacher at Eton College, envisioned establishing a college for the purpose of training clergy for service in the colonies: both as ministers for the colonists and as missionaries to the native populations.[5]

Coleridge’s vision was supported by the “high church Anglican network”,[citation needed] but it aroused opposition in low church circles as too much like a Roman Catholic seminary. Coupling the establishment of the college with the restoration of the ruins of St Augustine's Abbey in Canterbury attracted sufficient support for the college to be established.[6]

The abbey had "reached its lowest point of degradation".[7] The gate was the entrance to a brewery, the kitchen was a public house, the grounds were used for dancing and fireworks.[7] This condition was the culmination of the abbey's dismantling and sale of material that began in 1541 after its closure by the Dissolution of the Monasteries during the English Reformation.[8]

Appalled by the abbey's condition, Alexander Beresford Hope MP (a devoted and wealthy layman) purchased the abbey’s ruins and ground plot in 1844. Inspired by Edward Coleridge's vision of a missionary college, the work of establishing the college soon commenced. Funds were raised with Hope as the principal donor along with many other contributors including Queen Victoria.[9] "New buildings arose, a new life seemed to come out of the old shadows that lay so long over and around the ruins." Hope was determined to restore the ancient appearance as much as possible and, in accordance with Hope’s desires, “pains were taken to preserve as much as possible of the old work that seemed worth preserving.”[citation needed] The Great Gate was refurbished and the college library was built over the foundation of what had been the abbey’s refectory. Beneath the library, the remains of an abbey crypt were restored and used for teaching carpentry and other handicrafts needed when the missionary graduates ventured into primitive conditions. The dormitories comprised a range of new buildings designed to blend in with the old.[10] The architect for the reconstruction was William Butterfield.[11]

The new Missionary College was consecrated on 29 June 1848. Some 1,200 people came to Canterbury for the occasion. The Archbishop of Canterbury and his party travelled from London on a special train. By 1849, the college was advertising for students. Over time, hundreds of young men, mostly from humble homes, enrolled and attained high standards of education.[12] Besides religious courses, students were taught practical medicine, Oriental languages, and handicrafts.[13]

Activities and graduates edit

People’s Magazine (1 June 1870) described the college's daily activities as summarized in the table below.[14]

Graduates of the college went to “remote, isolated, dangerous, and impoverished parts” of the British Empire. They faced shipwreck, wars, tempests, wild animals and fire. Their destinations and distinctions achieved are shown in the following table.[15]

TIME ACTIVITY DESTINATION NUMBER DISTINCTION NUMBER
6:00am Wake up Africa and Middle East 76 Bishop 5
7:00am Chapel, followed by study Asia and India 126 Dean 3
8:00am Breakfast for students and faculty, followed by study Australia, New Zealand and Pacific 98 Archdeacons 20 plus
9:00am Lectures begin Canada and Newfoundland 147 Martyrs 1
2:00pm Lunch followed by recreation West Indies and Central and South America 23 College principals 2
6:00pm Tea followed by study time England and Gibraltar 10 Decorated military chaplains 6
9:30pm Chapel Zululand 4
10:30pm Lights out Not assigned or not listed 27
Total 511

Global Majority Students edit

St Augustine's College admitted men of "any nation and rank in life".[16] They included a noticeable number of students from around the world. Boggis discusses Erasmus Augustine Kallihirua and Cecil Majaliwa amongst others.[17] Other Global Majority students from the early period include Shapurji Edalji.[18] Photographic portraits of some of these students (together with photographs of some white students and additional information) have been published on the St Augustine's Foundation website.[19][20]

Closure edit

On the night of 31 May 1942, a German air-raid so badly damaged the college that it could no longer operate and the few remaining students moved away. The air-raid spread shards of glass across the campus. Canon W. F. France, the last warden of the Missionary College, spent his days picking up the glass shards. France knew that if the shards were ground in, the soil would be forever contaminated by them.[21]

Fyndon's Great Gate entrance to the college exemplified the devastating damage: it along with buildings inside and outside the college had to be rebuilt.[22]

One factor in the college’s permanent closure was the extensive and costly repairs that would be required to make the buildings again usable. Another factor that led to closing the college as a school for missionaries was that an Archbishops' Commission recommended the closing of separate missionary colleges. Thus, St Augustine's College never reopened as a missionary college. During its century of operation the college sent around 800 men to many parts of the world.[23]

Central college edit

Closing the Missionary College in 1947 left its buildings free for other uses. The next year, the 1948 Lambeth Conference of the Anglican Communion adopted the following resolution for a new use. "In the opinion of this Conference the establishment of a central college for the Anglican Communion is highly desirable and steps should immediately be taken to establish this college, if possible at St Augustine's College, Canterbury."[24]

The wartime damage that contributed to closing the Missionary College created the possibility for a Central College on the site. However, the damage necessitated extensive reconstruction and modernization. This done, St Augustine's College was reopened in 1952 as the Central College of the Anglican Communion with accommodation for up to 50 students.[25]

Purposes edit

The Missionary College sent clergy from England to other parts of the world. The Central College brought clergy to England from other parts of the world.[26] This bringing together priests from across the worldwide Anglican Communion served two primary purposes. One purpose was further study and research. The other purpose was bonding the Anglican Communion more closely together by common worship and by knowing and learning from each other.[27] The worship included every student's liturgy, often in their native language.[28]

The student body was composed of about forty priests nominated by their bishops. They came from the United States, Nigeria, the West Indies, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Africa, India, Pakistan, Japan and other parts of the Anglican Communion.[29] Earning a diploma required at least two eight week terms in residence: at least three terms were encouraged. A diploma was also contingent on satisfactory academic work coupled with participation in the common life and faithfulness in worship.[30]

The faculty was composed of scholars from various provinces of the Anglican Communion, including Japan, the Sudan, China, Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom. The first warden was the Revd Kenneth Sansbury, who served until 1961. The second warden was the Revd Kenneth Cragg who served until the college closed in 1967.[29]

The 1958 Lambeth Conference's Resolution 95: Ministries and Manpower – St. Augustine's College, Canterbury said that "the Conference expresses its satisfaction at the establishment of progress of St Augustine's College, Canterbury, as a central college for the Anglican Communion. It approves of the way in which its work is developing and would encourage its continuance on the present line."[31] In spite of this verbal support, before the next Lambeth Conference, the Central College closed because of lack of support from the provinces of the Anglican Communion. Resources for the college were "always precarious".[29] For most of its operating costs, it had to compete with other causes for voluntary contributions from the various provinces of the Anglican Communion. By the mid-1960s, the college's finances were strained and contributions were decreasing. Lack of funds "effectively constituted the demise of the college".[32] After the Central College closed in 1967, the first warden, by then the Bishop Sansbury, laid the basic reason for its closure on "a failure of some in positions of ultimate authority to keep fresh the vision of what the Central College was intended to be, and what in great measure it succeeded in being."[33]

From 1969–1976 St Augustine's was used by King's College, London, for a fourth year of pastoral theological training for its ordinands. The Revd Anthony E. Harvey was the warden and the Revd Kenneth S. Mason was the sub-warden.

King's School edit

The King's School, Canterbury, has used the St Augustine's College site (excluding the abbey ruins) since 1976. The portion of the site used by the school was by lease until its purchase in 1994. Buildings used by the Missionary College and the Central College were renovated and new ones built for a total of five boarding houses, as well as the school library.[34]

The ruins of the abbey are now a UNESCO World Heritage Site in the care of English Heritage.[35]

Selected faculty and alumni of the Missionary College edit

Wardens edit

Lecturers edit

Council members edit

Alumni edit

Selected staff members of the Central College edit

Wardens edit

Fellows edit

  • George Francis Selby Gray, formerly a professor at Huachung University, Wuchang, China 1952–?[40]
  • Edward Charles Chandler, Order of the Nile, formerly Traffic Manager, Sudan Railways[41]
  • Richard Fredrick Hettlinger – 1953–59, formerly a professor at Wycliffe College, Toronto, Canada[42]
  • Howard A. Johnson, Canon Theologian, Cathedral of St John the Divine, New York City, New York, United States – 1953–54[43]
  • Reuel L. Howe, Virginia Theological Seminary, Alexandria, Virginia, United States – 1954[44]
  • Charles W. F. Smith, Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge, United States – 1955[45]
  • William Enkichi Kan, Dean of Divinity, St Paul’s University, Tokyo, Japan – 1955–56[45]
  • George Noel Lankester Hall – 1957–1960
  • Leonard M. Schiff – 1962[46]
  • William H. Ralston Jr. – 1960–62[47]

Visiting lecturers edit

  • A. O. Standen
  • B. J. Wigan

References edit

  1. ^ "St. Augustine's Abbey". English Heritage. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  2. ^ Canon W. F. France, St Augustine's, Canterbury: A Story of Enduring Life (S.P.C.K., London, 1952)
  3. ^ Canon W. F. France, St Augustine's, Canterbury: A Story of Enduring Life (SPCK, 1952) p. 10.
  4. ^ Hilary M. Carey, God’s Empire (Cambridge University Press, 2011) 265–266, 271–272.
  5. ^ Canon W. F. France, St Augustine's, Canterbury: A Story of Enduring Life (SPCK, 1952), 10.
  6. ^ Hilary M. Carey, God’s Empire (Cambridge University Press, 2011) 272–274.
  7. ^ a b "Guide to St. Augustine's Monastery and Missionary College, by Robert Ewell (1896)". anglicanhistory.org. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  8. ^ Judith Roebuck, St Augustine's Abbey (English Heritage, 1997) 13.
  9. ^ "Missionary College of St. Augustine, Canterbury (1848)". anglicanhistory.org. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  10. ^ John Brent, Canterbury in the Olden Time (Simpkin, Marshall & Co, 1879) 269–272. Also available online in Google Books.
  11. ^ Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1334337)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  12. ^ Michael Blain (2007). "College of S. Augustine, Canterbury: Participants at the Consecration, S. Peter's Day, 1848" (PDF). anglicanhistory.org.
  13. ^ John Brent, Canterbury in the Olden Time (Simpkin, Marshall & Co, 1879) 272. Also available online in Google Books.
  14. ^ "People's Magazine: An Illustrated Miscellany for Family Reading". Society for promoting Christian knowledge. 13 October 1870. Retrieved 13 October 2023 – via Google Books.
  15. ^ based on Hilary M. Carey, God’s Empire (Cambridge University Press, 2011), 280–282.
  16. ^ Carteret-Bisson, Frederick Shirley Dumaresq de (1884). Our Schools and Colleges ... Simpkin, Marshall. p. 366.
  17. ^ Robert James Edmund Boggis (1907). A History of St. Augustine's College, Canterbury: By The Reverend R. J. E. Boggis, B.D. Harvard University. Cross & Jackson. pp. 189–199.
  18. ^ Robert James Edmund Boggis (1907). A History of St. Augustine's College, Canterbury: By The Reverend R. J. E. Boggis, B.D. Harvard University. Cross & Jackson. pp. 316–317.
  19. ^ "Our Students". St Augustine's Foundation. Retrieved 20 June 2023.
  20. ^ "Our Story". St Augustine's Foundation. Retrieved 20 June 2023.
  21. ^ "St Augustine's, Canterbury: A Story of Enduring Life". 13 October 1952. Retrieved 13 October 2023 – via Internet Archive.
  22. ^ "Fyndon Gate Tower, Canterbury". Britain Express. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  23. ^ Canon W. F. France, St Augustine's, Canterbury: A Story of Enduring Life (SPCK, London, 1952) 11, 12.
  24. ^ . Lambeth Conference. Church of England. 1948. Archived from the original on 18 April 2012.
  25. ^ St Augustine's, Canterbury: Central College of the Anglican Communion (The College, 195-?)
  26. ^ Kenneth Cragg, "The Central College of the Anglican Communion 1952–1967", Anglican and Episcopal History, 59 no 2 Je 1990, p. 229.
  27. ^ The Lambeth Conference 1948, Pt II (SPCK, 1948), pp. 91–92, quoted in St Augustine's, Canterbury: Central College of the Anglican Communion (The College, 195-?)
  28. ^ Kenneth Cragg, "The Central College of the Anglican Communion 1952–1967", Anglican and Episcopal History, 59 no 2 Je 1990, p. 238.
  29. ^ a b c Kenneth Cragg, "The Central College of the Anglican Communion 1952–1967", Anglican and Episcopal History, 59 no 2 Je 1990, p. 230.
  30. ^ St. Augustine's, Canterbury: Central College of the Anglican Communion (The College, 195-?)
  31. ^ "Resolution 95 - Ministries and Manpower - St. Augustine's College". Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  32. ^ Kenneth Cragg, "The Central College of the Anglican Communion 1952–1967", Anglican and Episcopal History, 59 no 2 Je 1990, p. 233.
  33. ^ Kenneth Cragg, "The Central College of the Anglican Communion 1952–1967", Anglican and Episcopal History, 59 no 2 Je 1990, p. 242.
  34. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 October 2013. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  35. ^ Canterbury Cathedral, St Augustine's Abbey, and St Martin's Church. and St Augustine's Abbey
  36. ^ Brown, Terry (1850). "Memoir of the Late Bishop Coleridge". The Colonial Church Chronicle, and Missionary Journal. IV: 3–11.
  37. ^ R.J.E.B. (1907). "Obituary: Rev. Canon Henry Bailey D.D." (PDF). The Eagle: Magazine of St. John's College, Cambridge. XXVIII: 199–203.
  38. ^ . Anglican Diocese of Perth. Archived from the original on 23 July 2014. Retrieved 5 August 2014.
  39. ^ Wisconsin Alumnus, 57:15 (25 July 1956)
  40. ^ St. Augustine's, Canterbury: Central College of the Anglican Communion, The College, 195-?.
  41. ^ The Episcopal Church Annual 1962, Morehouse-Barlow, 1962.
  42. ^ Richard F. Hettlinger.
  43. ^ http://anglicanhistory.org/misc/freemasonry/cathedral1956.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  44. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 September 2013. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
  45. ^ a b St. Augustine's, Canterbury: Central College of the Anglican Communion (The College, 195-?)
  46. ^ The Episcopal Church Annual 1962, Morehouse-Barlow, 1962, p. 55.
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 September 2004. Retrieved 14 August 2013.

External links edit

  • “A Short Guide to the Abbey and College of St. Augustine, Canterbury” (1908) lists the College faculty and describes the program on the back cover.
  • Brochure about St Augustine’s as the Central College of the Anglican Communion
  • Booklet by Canon France, last warden of St Augustine’s Missionary College
  • College of S. Augustine Canterbury: Participants at the Consecration, S. Peter's Day, 1848, by Michael Blain (2007)
  • “Guide to St. Augustine's Monastery and Missionary College”
  • "Historic Canterbury: St. Augustine's Missionary College" pictures and documents.
  • Historical documents on St Augustine's, particularly its creation
  • People’s Magazine: An Illustrated Miscellany for Family Reading (London: June 1, 1870) contains an article about St. Augustine’s Missionary College, Canterbury, 244–248. Beginning with the coming of Augustine and companions to Kent in A.D.596 as missionaries, it tells the story of the Abbey from its greatness as a learning center to its dissolution, desecration, and restoration in the mid-nineteenth century as a missionary college.
  • Photo of Dormitory, Great Gate, and Refectory used since the Missionary College opened in 1848.

51°16′44″N 1°5′14″E / 51.27889°N 1.08722°E / 51.27889; 1.08722

augustine, college, kent, augustine, college, canterbury, kent, united, kingdom, located, within, precincts, augustine, abbey, about, miles, metres, canterbury, cathedral, served, first, missionary, college, church, england, 1848, 1947, later, central, college. St Augustine s College in Canterbury Kent United Kingdom was located within the precincts of St Augustine s Abbey about 0 2 miles 335 metres ESE of Canterbury Cathedral It served first as a missionary college of the Church of England 1848 1947 and later as the Central College of the Anglican Communion 1952 1967 2 Abbot Fyndon s Great Gate previously used by the Abbey and both Colleges is now a private entrance into the King s School The public entrance to the abbey ruins is on Longport 1 Ruins of St Augustine s Abbey with a college building in the mid background and Canterbury Cathedral in the far background Contents 1 Missionary college 1 1 Activities and graduates 1 2 Global Majority Students 1 3 Closure 2 Central college 2 1 Purposes 3 King s School 4 Selected faculty and alumni of the Missionary College 4 1 Wardens 4 2 Lecturers 4 3 Council members 4 4 Alumni 5 Selected staff members of the Central College 5 1 Wardens 5 2 Fellows 5 3 Visiting lecturers 6 References 7 External linksMissionary college edit nbsp The former chapellThe mid 19th century witnessed a mass migration from England to its colonies In response the Church of England sent clergy but the demand for them to serve overseas exceeded supply 3 Colonial bishoprics were established but the bishops were without clergy The training of missionary clergy for the colonies was notoriously difficult because they were required to have not only piety and desire they were required to have an education equivalent to that of a university degree The founding of the missionary college of St Augustine s provided a solution to this problem 4 The Revd Edward Coleridge a teacher at Eton College envisioned establishing a college for the purpose of training clergy for service in the colonies both as ministers for the colonists and as missionaries to the native populations 5 Coleridge s vision was supported by the high church Anglican network citation needed but it aroused opposition in low church circles as too much like a Roman Catholic seminary Coupling the establishment of the college with the restoration of the ruins of St Augustine s Abbey in Canterbury attracted sufficient support for the college to be established 6 The abbey had reached its lowest point of degradation 7 The gate was the entrance to a brewery the kitchen was a public house the grounds were used for dancing and fireworks 7 This condition was the culmination of the abbey s dismantling and sale of material that began in 1541 after its closure by the Dissolution of the Monasteries during the English Reformation 8 Appalled by the abbey s condition Alexander Beresford Hope MP a devoted and wealthy layman purchased the abbey s ruins and ground plot in 1844 Inspired by Edward Coleridge s vision of a missionary college the work of establishing the college soon commenced Funds were raised with Hope as the principal donor along with many other contributors including Queen Victoria 9 New buildings arose a new life seemed to come out of the old shadows that lay so long over and around the ruins Hope was determined to restore the ancient appearance as much as possible and in accordance with Hope s desires pains were taken to preserve as much as possible of the old work that seemed worth preserving citation needed The Great Gate was refurbished and the college library was built over the foundation of what had been the abbey s refectory Beneath the library the remains of an abbey crypt were restored and used for teaching carpentry and other handicrafts needed when the missionary graduates ventured into primitive conditions The dormitories comprised a range of new buildings designed to blend in with the old 10 The architect for the reconstruction was William Butterfield 11 The new Missionary College was consecrated on 29 June 1848 Some 1 200 people came to Canterbury for the occasion The Archbishop of Canterbury and his party travelled from London on a special train By 1849 the college was advertising for students Over time hundreds of young men mostly from humble homes enrolled and attained high standards of education 12 Besides religious courses students were taught practical medicine Oriental languages and handicrafts 13 Activities and graduates edit People s Magazine 1 June 1870 described the college s daily activities as summarized in the table below 14 Graduates of the college went to remote isolated dangerous and impoverished parts of the British Empire They faced shipwreck wars tempests wild animals and fire Their destinations and distinctions achieved are shown in the following table 15 TIME ACTIVITY DESTINATION NUMBER DISTINCTION NUMBER6 00am Wake up Africa and Middle East 76 Bishop 57 00am Chapel followed by study Asia and India 126 Dean 38 00am Breakfast for students and faculty followed by study Australia New Zealand and Pacific 98 Archdeacons 20 plus9 00am Lectures begin Canada and Newfoundland 147 Martyrs 12 00pm Lunch followed by recreation West Indies and Central and South America 23 College principals 26 00pm Tea followed by study time England and Gibraltar 10 Decorated military chaplains 69 30pm Chapel Zululand 4 10 30pm Lights out Not assigned or not listed 27 Total 511 Global Majority Students edit St Augustine s College admitted men of any nation and rank in life 16 They included a noticeable number of students from around the world Boggis discusses Erasmus Augustine Kallihirua and Cecil Majaliwa amongst others 17 Other Global Majority students from the early period include Shapurji Edalji 18 Photographic portraits of some of these students together with photographs of some white students and additional information have been published on the St Augustine s Foundation website 19 20 Closure edit On the night of 31 May 1942 a German air raid so badly damaged the college that it could no longer operate and the few remaining students moved away The air raid spread shards of glass across the campus Canon W F France the last warden of the Missionary College spent his days picking up the glass shards France knew that if the shards were ground in the soil would be forever contaminated by them 21 Fyndon s Great Gate entrance to the college exemplified the devastating damage it along with buildings inside and outside the college had to be rebuilt 22 One factor in the college s permanent closure was the extensive and costly repairs that would be required to make the buildings again usable Another factor that led to closing the college as a school for missionaries was that an Archbishops Commission recommended the closing of separate missionary colleges Thus St Augustine s College never reopened as a missionary college During its century of operation the college sent around 800 men to many parts of the world 23 Central college editClosing the Missionary College in 1947 left its buildings free for other uses The next year the 1948 Lambeth Conference of the Anglican Communion adopted the following resolution for a new use In the opinion of this Conference the establishment of a central college for the Anglican Communion is highly desirable and steps should immediately be taken to establish this college if possible at St Augustine s College Canterbury 24 The wartime damage that contributed to closing the Missionary College created the possibility for a Central College on the site However the damage necessitated extensive reconstruction and modernization This done St Augustine s College was reopened in 1952 as the Central College of the Anglican Communion with accommodation for up to 50 students 25 Purposes edit The Missionary College sent clergy from England to other parts of the world The Central College brought clergy to England from other parts of the world 26 This bringing together priests from across the worldwide Anglican Communion served two primary purposes One purpose was further study and research The other purpose was bonding the Anglican Communion more closely together by common worship and by knowing and learning from each other 27 The worship included every student s liturgy often in their native language 28 The student body was composed of about forty priests nominated by their bishops They came from the United States Nigeria the West Indies Canada Australia New Zealand Africa India Pakistan Japan and other parts of the Anglican Communion 29 Earning a diploma required at least two eight week terms in residence at least three terms were encouraged A diploma was also contingent on satisfactory academic work coupled with participation in the common life and faithfulness in worship 30 The faculty was composed of scholars from various provinces of the Anglican Communion including Japan the Sudan China Canada the United States and the United Kingdom The first warden was the Revd Kenneth Sansbury who served until 1961 The second warden was the Revd Kenneth Cragg who served until the college closed in 1967 29 The 1958 Lambeth Conference s Resolution 95 Ministries and Manpower St Augustine s College Canterbury said that the Conference expresses its satisfaction at the establishment of progress of St Augustine s College Canterbury as a central college for the Anglican Communion It approves of the way in which its work is developing and would encourage its continuance on the present line 31 In spite of this verbal support before the next Lambeth Conference the Central College closed because of lack of support from the provinces of the Anglican Communion Resources for the college were always precarious 29 For most of its operating costs it had to compete with other causes for voluntary contributions from the various provinces of the Anglican Communion By the mid 1960s the college s finances were strained and contributions were decreasing Lack of funds effectively constituted the demise of the college 32 After the Central College closed in 1967 the first warden by then the Bishop Sansbury laid the basic reason for its closure on a failure of some in positions of ultimate authority to keep fresh the vision of what the Central College was intended to be and what in great measure it succeeded in being 33 From 1969 1976 St Augustine s was used by King s College London for a fourth year of pastoral theological training for its ordinands The Revd Anthony E Harvey was the warden and the Revd Kenneth S Mason was the sub warden King s School editThe King s School Canterbury has used the St Augustine s College site excluding the abbey ruins since 1976 The portion of the site used by the school was by lease until its purchase in 1994 Buildings used by the Missionary College and the Central College were renovated and new ones built for a total of five boarding houses as well as the school library 34 The ruins of the abbey are now a UNESCO World Heritage Site in the care of English Heritage 35 Selected faculty and alumni of the Missionary College editWardens edit Right Rev William Hart Coleridge 1848 1849 36 Rev Canon Henry Bailey D D 1850 1878 37 George Frederick Maclear 1880 1902 Basil Colby Roberts 1941 1955Lecturers edit Vivian H H Green Philip Arthur Micklem Edward William WilliamsonCouncil members edit Joshua Watson member of council on foundationAlumni edit See also Category Alumni of St Augustine s College Canterbury George Appleton 1902 1993 Archdeacon of London 1962 1963 and Fourth Archbishop of Perth Australia 1963 1969 38 Nelson Wellesley Fogarty William Godfrey Laurie Green Graeme Knowles Bransby Lewis Key Keith Newton Stephen Oliver William Cyprian Pinkham Philipose Mar Chrysostom Colin Slee Gilbert Price Lloyd Turner James Carter 1828 1909 student 1852 1853 Charles Marsden Betts 1833 1857 Hutcheson Exhibitioner student 1853 1855 Canon Arthur Margoschis student 1875 who later become a notable SPG missionary to IndiaSelected staff members of the Central College editWardens edit Cyril Kenneth Sansbury 1952 1961 Kenneth Cragg 1961 1967 Alden D Kelly Sub warden 1956 39 Fellows edit George Francis Selby Gray formerly a professor at Huachung University Wuchang China 1952 40 Edward Charles Chandler Order of the Nile formerly Traffic Manager Sudan Railways 41 Richard Fredrick Hettlinger 1953 59 formerly a professor at Wycliffe College Toronto Canada 42 Howard A Johnson Canon Theologian Cathedral of St John the Divine New York City New York United States 1953 54 43 Reuel L Howe Virginia Theological Seminary Alexandria Virginia United States 1954 44 Charles W F Smith Episcopal Theological School Cambridge United States 1955 45 William Enkichi Kan Dean of Divinity St Paul s University Tokyo Japan 1955 56 45 George Noel Lankester Hall 1957 1960 Leonard M Schiff 1962 46 William H Ralston Jr 1960 62 47 Visiting lecturers edit A O Standen B J WiganReferences edit St Augustine s Abbey English Heritage Retrieved 13 October 2023 Canon W F France St Augustine s Canterbury A Story of Enduring Life S P C K London 1952 Canon W F France St Augustine s Canterbury A Story of Enduring Life SPCK 1952 p 10 Hilary M Carey God s Empire Cambridge University Press 2011 265 266 271 272 Canon W F France St Augustine s Canterbury A Story of Enduring Life SPCK 1952 10 Hilary M Carey God s Empire Cambridge University Press 2011 272 274 a b Guide to St Augustine s Monastery and Missionary College by Robert Ewell 1896 anglicanhistory org Retrieved 13 October 2023 Judith Roebuck St Augustine s Abbey English Heritage 1997 13 Missionary College of St Augustine Canterbury 1848 anglicanhistory org Retrieved 13 October 2023 John Brent Canterbury in the Olden Time Simpkin Marshall amp Co 1879 269 272 Also available online in Google Books Historic England Details from listed building database 1334337 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 5 January 2014 Michael Blain 2007 College of S Augustine Canterbury Participants at the Consecration S Peter s Day 1848 PDF anglicanhistory org John Brent Canterbury in the Olden Time Simpkin Marshall amp Co 1879 272 Also available online in Google Books People s Magazine An Illustrated Miscellany for Family Reading Society for promoting Christian knowledge 13 October 1870 Retrieved 13 October 2023 via Google Books based on Hilary M Carey God s Empire Cambridge University Press 2011 280 282 Carteret Bisson Frederick Shirley Dumaresq de 1884 Our Schools and Colleges Simpkin Marshall p 366 Robert James Edmund Boggis 1907 A History of St Augustine s College Canterbury By The Reverend R J E Boggis B D Harvard University Cross amp Jackson pp 189 199 Robert James Edmund Boggis 1907 A History of St Augustine s College Canterbury By The Reverend R J E Boggis B D Harvard University Cross amp Jackson pp 316 317 Our Students St Augustine s Foundation Retrieved 20 June 2023 Our Story St Augustine s Foundation Retrieved 20 June 2023 St Augustine s Canterbury A Story of Enduring Life 13 October 1952 Retrieved 13 October 2023 via Internet Archive Fyndon Gate Tower Canterbury Britain Express Retrieved 13 October 2023 Canon W F France St Augustine s Canterbury A Story of Enduring Life SPCK London 1952 11 12 Resolution 86 The Anglican Communion A Central College Lambeth Conference Church of England 1948 Archived from the original on 18 April 2012 St Augustine s Canterbury Central College of the Anglican Communion The College 195 Kenneth Cragg The Central College of the Anglican Communion 1952 1967 Anglican and Episcopal History 59 no 2 Je 1990 p 229 The Lambeth Conference 1948 Pt II SPCK 1948 pp 91 92 quoted in St Augustine s Canterbury Central College of the Anglican Communion The College 195 Kenneth Cragg The Central College of the Anglican Communion 1952 1967 Anglican and Episcopal History 59 no 2 Je 1990 p 238 a b c Kenneth Cragg The Central College of the Anglican Communion 1952 1967 Anglican and Episcopal History 59 no 2 Je 1990 p 230 St Augustine s Canterbury Central College of the Anglican Communion The College 195 Resolution 95 Ministries and Manpower St Augustine s College Retrieved 13 October 2023 Kenneth Cragg The Central College of the Anglican Communion 1952 1967 Anglican and Episcopal History 59 no 2 Je 1990 p 233 Kenneth Cragg The Central College of the Anglican Communion 1952 1967 Anglican and Episcopal History 59 no 2 Je 1990 p 242 King s School website Archived from the original on 22 October 2013 Retrieved 13 October 2023 Canterbury Cathedral St Augustine s Abbey and St Martin s Church and St Augustine s Abbey Brown Terry 1850 Memoir of the Late Bishop Coleridge The Colonial Church Chronicle and Missionary Journal IV 3 11 R J E B 1907 Obituary Rev Canon Henry Bailey D D PDF The Eagle Magazine of St John s College Cambridge XXVIII 199 203 The Most Reverend George Appleton The Fourth Archbishop of Perth 1963 1969 Anglican Diocese of Perth Archived from the original on 23 July 2014 Retrieved 5 August 2014 Wisconsin Alumnus 57 15 25 July 1956 St Augustine s Canterbury Central College of the Anglican Communion The College 195 The Episcopal Church Annual 1962 Morehouse Barlow 1962 Richard F Hettlinger http anglicanhistory org misc freemasonry cathedral1956 pdf bare URL PDF Partners in Preaching Clergy and Laity in Dialogue Archived from the original on 9 September 2013 Retrieved 14 August 2013 a b St Augustine s Canterbury Central College of the Anglican Communion The College 195 The Episcopal Church Annual 1962 Morehouse Barlow 1962 p 55 Savannah NOW Local News St John s Episcopal celebrates rector s 25th anniversary with organ recital 09 25 99 Archived from the original on 12 September 2004 Retrieved 14 August 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to St Augustine s College Kent A Short Guide to the Abbey and College of St Augustine Canterbury 1908 lists the College faculty and describes the program on the back cover Brochure about St Augustine s as the Central College of the Anglican Communion Booklet by Canon France last warden of St Augustine s Missionary College College of S Augustine Canterbury Participants at the Consecration S Peter s Day 1848 by Michael Blain 2007 Guide to St Augustine s Monastery and Missionary College Historic Canterbury St Augustine s Missionary College pictures and documents Historical documents on St Augustine s particularly its creation People s Magazine An Illustrated Miscellany for Family Reading London June 1 1870 contains an article about St Augustine s Missionary College Canterbury 244 248 Beginning with the coming of Augustine and companions to Kent in A D 596 as missionaries it tells the story of the Abbey from its greatness as a learning center to its dissolution desecration and restoration in the mid nineteenth century as a missionary college Photo of Dormitory Great Gate and Refectory used since the Missionary College opened in 1848 51 16 44 N 1 5 14 E 51 27889 N 1 08722 E 51 27889 1 08722 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Augustine 27s College Kent amp oldid 1215949080, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.