- Thomas Thellusson Carter
Infobox clergy
name = Thomas Thellusson Carter
image_size =
caption =
birth_date = birth date|1808|03|19
birth_place = Eton,Buckinghamshire ,England
death_date = death date and age|1901|10|28|1808|03|19
death_place =Clewer ,Berkshire ,England
church =Church of England
other_names =
education =Eton College
Christ Church, Oxford
ordained =Deacon ,21 October 1832 Priest ,22 December 1833
writings =
congregations =
offices_held =
title =
spouse = Mary Ann Gould
children =
parents =
footnotes =Thomas Thellusson Carter often known as T. T. Carter or T.T.C. (
19 March ,1808 –28 October 1901 [GRO Register of Deaths DEC 1901 2c 269 WINDSOR, aged 93] ) was a significant figure in the VictorianChurch of England , responsible for re-introducing someAnglo-Catholic practices to the Church, being the founder ofConfraternity of the Blessed Sacrament . He also founded several charitable organisations. He was a prolific writer on church matters and a project exists to collect and collate all his writings. He was for 36 years theRector ofClewer and an Honorary Canon ofChrist Church Cathedral, Oxford . [ [http://www.clewervillage.co.uk/tccarter.htm A History of Clewer ] ] [ [http://anglicanhistory.org/england/ttcarter/ Project Canterbury: T.T. Carter ] ] [ [http://www.confraternity.org.uk/index.php?content=11b&newsID=22 Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament ] ]Early life
Carter was the son of Revd Thomas Carter (then under master, and later Vice-Provost of
Eton College ) and his wife Mary (née Proctor). Carter was educated at Eton from the age of six, and when he left was captain ofoppidans . He then entered Christ Church, Oxford in 1825. Amongst those he met there wereEdward Bouverie Pusey who had been a pupil of his father's. He graduated withfirst class honours inclassics in 1831, and attempted to gain a fellowship at Oriel, but was unsuccessful.Bonham, Valerie [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/32314 ‘Carter, Thomas Thellusson (1808–1901)’] , "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ",Oxford University Press , 2004, doi|10.1093/ref:odnb/32314. Retrieved5 June 2008 .]Ministry
Carter was ordained
deacon on21 October 1832 byThomas Burgess ,Bishop of Salisbury . He served his firstcuracy at St Mary, Reading, whereHenry Hart Milman was thenvicar . Carter waspriest ed by John Kaye,Bishop of Lincoln on22 December 1833 , and went to serve as his father's curate, who was now vicar ofBurnham, Buckinghamshire .Carter was married at Amberd,
Taunton ,Somerset on26 November ,1835 to Mary Ann Gould (1800–7 February 1869 ). It was through her that he first came into contact with theTractarian movement, sinceRichard Hurrell Froude was a family friend. In 1838 he was appointed rector ofPiddlehinton (nearDorchester ). This proved to be an unhappy appointment, and his health suffered. From 1842, he took a period of leave back at Burnham to recover, and in 1844 was appointed rector of Clewer (nearWindsor ).Here he soon restored the parish church, with the aid of his friend, an architect,
Henry Woodyer . Carter also set up two mision churches within the parish, and set out to assist the poor of the parish, establishing abenefit society , atemperance society and converting part of theglebe to allotments. Within the large parish, a particularly poor are was theslum of Clewer Fields, which contained twoarmy barracks and a swiftly changing population of railwaynavvies , which served to worsen the general problems of drink, prostitution and poverty.Beginning with just one young woman in December 1848, a parishioner, a widow named Mariquita Tennant, begin to take in youg women from Clewer Fields, and give them an alternative to life there. This became the Clewer House of Mercy, which Carter, influenced by the writings of John Armstrong strongly supported. Ill-health prompted Tennant's withdrawal from the project in 1851, and she was succeeded by another widow, 40-year-old Harriet Monsell, who became
mother superior of the newly createdCommunity of St John Baptist , Clewer on30 November 1852 . Soon there were over forty branch houses, and significant work was undertaken in theUnited States and India. Re-establishment of thereligious life was still controversial inAnglicanism (all monasteries and other religious houses had been dissolved during theEnglish Reformation ), and the foundation of a sisterhood was viewed with alarm in some quarters, not least among them being theBishop of Oxford (the diocesan),Samuel Wilberforce , despite his misgivings, he acted asVisitor to the community until his move to Winchester in 1869.Carter's involvement in the establishment of this community, and his general commitment to pastoral work drew him into the provision of
spiritual direction , which became a new focus of activity and led to the book, "The Treasury of Devotion" which appeared in 1869. He also became a pioneer of retreats within the Church of England. This work also led him into the controversial area of auricular confession, and in 1865, the book, "The Doctrine of Confession in the Church of England". When, in 1873, a controversial petition signed by 483 clergy requesting the provision of suitably qualified confessors was presented to the Convocation of Canterbury, he was one of those who drew up the "Declaration on Confession and Absolution, as Set Forth by the Church of England " in defence of private confession.References
Persondata
NAME = Carter, Thomas Thellusson
ALTERNATIVE NAMES = Carter, T. T.
SHORT DESCRIPTION = Clergyman
DATE OF BIRTH =1808-03-19
PLACE OF BIRTH =Eton, Buckinghamshire ,England
DATE OF DEATH =1901-10-28
PLACE OF DEATH =Clewer ,Berkshire ,England
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