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See also: English See also: clergy-See also: man and social reformer, was See also: born at See also: Bristol on the 8th of See also: February 1844, the son of See also: Francis See also: Augustus Barnett, an iron manufacturer
.
After leaving Wadham See also: College, See also: Oxford, in 1866, he visited the See also: United States
.
Next See also: year he was ordained to the curacy of St Mary's, Bryanston Square, and took See also: priest's orders in 1868
.
In 1872 he became See also: vicar of St See also: Jude's, Commercial Street, Whitechapel, and in the next year married Henrietta See also: Octavia See also: Rowland, who had been a co-worker with See also: Miss Octavia See also: Hill and was no less ardent a philanthropist than her
See also: husband
.
Mr and Mrs Barnett worked hard for the poor of their parish, opening evening See also: schools for adults, providing them with See also: music and reasonable entertainment, and serving on the See also: board of guardians and on the managing committees of schools
.
Mr Barnett did much to discourage outdoor See also: relief, as tending to the pauperization of the neighbourhood
.
At the same See also: time the conditions of indoor relief were improved, and the various charities were co-ordinated, by co-operation with the Charity Organization Society and the parish board of guardians
.
In 1875 See also: Arnold See also: Toynbee paid a visit, the first of many, to See also: White-
See also: chapel, and Mr Barnett, who kept in See also: constant touch with Oxford, formed in' 877 a small committee, over which he presided himself, to consider the organization of university extension in See also: London, his chief assistants being Leonard Montefiore, a See also: young Oxford man, and See also: Frederick See also: Rogers, a member of the vellum binders' See also: trade union
.
The committee received influential support, and in See also: October four courses of lectures, one by Dr S
.
R
.
See also: Gardiner on English See also: history, were given in Whitechapel
.
The Barnetts were also associated with the See also: building of See also: model dwellings, with the establishment of the See also: children's country See also: holiday fund and the See also: annual loan exhibitions of See also: fine See also: art at the Whitechapel gallery
.
In 1884 an article by Mr Barnett in the Nineteenth Century discussed the question of university settlements . This resulted inSee also: July in the formation of the University Settlements Association, and when Toynbee See also: Hall was built shortly afterwards Mr Barnett became its
See also: warden
.
He was a select preacher at Oxford in 1895-1897, and at Cambridge in 1900; he received a canonry in Bristol See also: cathedral in 1893, but retained his wardenship of Toynbee Hall, while relinquishing. the living of St Jude's
.
In See also: June 1906 he was preferred to a canonry at See also: Westminster, and when in See also: December he resigned the wardenship of Toynbee Hall the position of president was created so that he might retain his connexion with the institution
.
Among See also: Canon Barnett's See also: works is Practicable See also: Socialism (1888, 2nd ed
.
1894), written in conjunction with his wife
.
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