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HUTTON, ARTHUR WOLLASTON: Church of England; b. at Spridlington (28 m. s. of Hull), Lincolnshire, Sept. 5, 1848. He was educated at Exeter College, Oxford (B.A., 1871), and was ordered deacon in 1871 and ordained priest in 1872. He was curate of St. Barnabas, Oxford, from 1871 to 1873, when he succeeded his father as rector of Spridlington. In 1876 he was received into the communion of the Roman Catholic Church by John Henry Newman. He was then a member of the Birmingham Oratory until 1883, in close association with the cardinal. He was librarian of the National Liberal Club from its foundation in 1887 to 1899. He returned to the Church of England in 1898, became rector of Easthope, Shropshire, in 1899, curate of St. Luke's, Richmond, in 1901, and rector of St. Mary-lo-Bow, Cheapside, London, in 1903. In theology he is a liberal Evangelical. His writings include: Our Position as Catholics in the Church of England (London, 1872); The Anglican Ministry (1879); Cardinal Manning (1892); Ecclesia discens (1904); Burford Papers (1905); The Church and the Barbarians (1906); and William Stubbs (1906). He edited S. R. Maitland's Essays on Subjects connected with the Reformation in England (1899); J. H. Newman's Lives of the English Saints (2 vols., 1900); and J. Tauler's The Inner Way 1901).

HUTTON, WILLIAM HOLDEN: Church of England; b. at Gate Burton, Lincolnshire, May 24, 1860. He studied e;, Magdalen College, Oxford (B.A., 1882), and in 1884 became a fellow and tutor of St. John's College, Oxford. He was Birkbeck Lecturer in ecclesiastical history at Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1895-97, and examining chaplain to Bishop Compton of Ely from 1896 to 1905, also Bampton Lecturer in 1903, and select preacher at Oxford (1898-1900), Dublin (1903), and Cambridge (1905). He became curator of the Indian Institute, Oxford, in 1900. His publications include The Political Disturbances which Aeeampanied the Early Period of the Reformation in Germany (London, 1881); The Misrule of Henry 111. (1887); Simon de Montfort (1888); Marquess Wellesley (1893); Sir Thomas More (1895); William Laud (1895); King and Baronage (1895); Philip Augustus (1896); Hampton Court (1896); The Church of the Sixth Century (1897); History of St. John Baptist College, Oxford (1898); A Short History of the Church in Great Britain (1899); St. Thomas of Canterbury (1899); Constantinople (1900); Influence of Christianity upon National Character Illustrated by Lives and Legends of the English Saints (Bampton lectures, 1903); The English Church, 1625-1714 (1903); and By Thames and Cotswold (1903). He edited Letters of Bishop Stubbs (London, 1904), and The Burford Letters (1905).

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