- Joseph Malet Lambert
Joseph Malet Lambert (1853-1931) played a prominent part in the history of Hull from 1881 until 1931. He was involved in great reforms in education and social affairs, proposing universal education as an economic stimulus. His "Two Thousand Years of Gild Life" (pub. 1891), described the development of the guild system in
England , with particular reference to Hull from the 14th to 18th century.Malet Lambert was born in Hull in 1853, the son of Joseph Lambert and his second wife, Jane Malet, of Cork. His mother died when he was young. When he was 11 years old, his father remarried to Susannah Wilson, the elder daughter of Thomas Wilson, the Hull ship-owner. He attended
Pocklington Grammar School and later entered his father's ship-broking business in theHigh Street .Eventually he entered
Trinity College, Dublin , graduating with a first rank honors BA in Natural Science 1879. In that same year he was ordained, becoming curate atTadcaster . In the late November 1881 he became perpetual curate ofNewland, Hull . In February 1882 he married Miss Rose Harrison, eldest daughter of Aurthur Harrison of Northgate House, Cottingham . He received an M.A. in 1883, Bachelor of Laws in 1884 and Doctor of Laws in 1885.In the 1880s, Malet Lambert was instrumental in setting up what later became the parish of St. Augustine's, Queens Road, a district taken out of his own parish of St. John's, Newland. In the 1890s the church of
St. John, Newland was increased in size.In 1894 Malet Lambert became
Rural dean of Hull. In 1900 he became Canon of York.Malet Lambert was a member of the
Hull School Board , and was chairman when it was dissolved in 1904. It was this Board which set up theCraven Street School which eventually becameMalet Lambert High School . He became chairman of theHull Higher Education Committee in 1905, a position he held until his death. He was also chairman of the Council ofHull University College from 1927 until 1931.Fifty years after Malet Lambert's death, the historian
Edward Gillett , writing in "A History of Hull", states that in the 1880s, the Rev. J.M. Lambert gave a strong lead in social reform in Hull.Highlights
* Vicar of St. John, Newland (1881-1912)
*Canon of York (1900–1931)
* Archdeacon of the East Riding (1917-1931)
* First Chairman of the Council of Hull University College (1927-1931)
* Chairman of Hull Higher Education Committee (1905-1931)
* [http://catalogue.bl.uk/F/?func=full-set-set&set_number=154987&set_entry=000001&format=999 Gambling: is it wrong?(1890) ]
* [http://www.archive.org/details/twothousandyears00lambuoft Two thousand years of Gild Life; (1891)]
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