Showing 228 results

Authority Record
Person

Holliday, Henry Thomas

  • 125
  • Person
  • 1854-1924

Henry Holliday was born in Sydney, studied at Moore College and was ordained in Bathurst in 1880. He worked in Condobolin and O'Connell before returning to Sydney and serving at St Barnabas Broadway, St Bartholomew Pyrmont, St Stephen's Penrith and Christ Church Bexley/St David's Arncliffe from 1910-1921. From 1911-1924 he was the Rural Dean of South Sydney. He was also a temperance advocate and a member of the Loyal Orange Association.

Hordern, Frederick Hugh

  • 156
  • Person
  • 1889-1975

Frederick Hordern was born in Ashfield, NSW and studied at Moore College from 1909-1911. After serving as curate of St George's Hobart from 1917-1918 he worked in many churches in Sydney, including Rose Bay, Prospect and St Peter's Cooks River. From 1929-1934 he was deputy secretary for CMS (Sydney).

Hotston, William

  • 187
  • Person
  • 1860-1927

William Hotston was born in Sussex, and studied at Moore College from 1879-1881. He was ordained in Bathurst in 1889 and served in many churches around Bathurst and Sydney.

Howard, Donald

  • 323
  • Person
  • 1926-

Donald W. Howard is the retired minister of St Peter’s Church of England, Sydney, Australia. After experience in agriculture, The Royal Australian Air Force, and journalism, Donald Howard studied Theology at Moore College, Sydney and then served for many years in the pastoral ministry. While at St. Peter’s, his first wife, Diana, died of cancer at the age of forty-six in 1977. After an active preaching ministry since his retirement in 1992, he and his second wife Nan became members of St Andrew’s Cathedral, Sydney.
Reference: https://banneroftruth.org/us/about/banner-authors/d-howard/

Hutchinson, Mark

  • 279
  • Person
  • 1958-

Mark Hutchinson was the director of the Centre for the Study of Australian Christianity at Robert Menzies College.

James, Alfred Francis Phillip

  • 415
  • Person
  • 1918-1992

Francis James was a journalist and publisher. He served in World War 2 with the Royal Air Force, was shot down over France in 1942, and spent time in German POW camps. In 1945 he was invalided out of the RAF and married Joyce Staff. In 1950 he worked for the Sydney Morning Herald, before becoming managing director of 'The Anglican' newspaper in 1952. In 1957 James established the Anglican Press Ltd., which went into receivership in 1960 and was taken over by Australian Consolidated Press. In 1969 he travelled to China and was imprisoned for spying, remaining in prison until 1970 when he was released, thanks to lobbying by his friend Gough Whitlam, who was Australian Prime Minister at the time.

Results 91 to 100 of 228