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Home Up Unsettled Years Failure at Piddlehinton When Carter came to Clewer "Papistical Practices" Canon Carter in Clewer Carter's Response Retirement Carter's Passing The Last Article
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UNSETTLED YEARS
The second in a series of occasional articles to mark the
centenary of the death of Thomas Thellusson Carter, Rector of Clewer, 1844 -
1880
Accounts of Carter’s early years in the ministry make
strange reading. He was ordained Deacon in 1832 and served for an unhappy year
at St. Mary’s, Reading, where church life was at a low ebb. In 1833 he went to
be curate for his father who (in addition to his Eton duties) was vicar of
Burnham.
In 1838 Carter was presented by his father to the parish of
Piddlehinton in Dorset. It is said that the Dorset climate was a trial to his
health, which I (as a Dorset resident) find puzzling. Giving that as his reason
he spent two winters at Weymouth. In 1842, while retaining the Piddlehinton
post, he went to be his father’s curate at Burnham where he remained for two
years. This adds up to an extraordinary pattern for a newly ordained (and
presumably dedicated) young man.
We have to consider what was happening in the Church of
England at the time. The "Tracts for the Times" were being issued from
Oxford and had great influence. John Henry Newman, whom Carter respected
greatly, wrote many of them. In 1839 Newman began to have doubts about the
claims of the Church of England, gradually withdrawing from its work until, in
1845, he became a Roman Catholic. Henry Manning, another of Carter’s mentors,
was increasingly attracted to the Church of Rome and he was to "go
over" in 1851. Other, less well-known, Oxford men also made the change.
This climate of change among men whom he admired must have
been disturbing for Carter. Because he had married in 1835, it would have been
difficult for him to follow the others into the Roman Catholic Church. In 1844
he became Rector of Clewer where, despite opposition, he proceeded to put his
"high church" beliefs and practices into effect.
Next month: The Disaster of Piddlehinton.
Denis Shaw |