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HEAD, FREDERICK WALDEGRAVE (1874-1941), anglican archbishop of
Melbourne, |
son of the Rev. Canon George Frederick Head, was born in London on 18 April
1874. Educated at Repton School and Emmanuel College, Cambridge, he graduated
B.A. with first class honours in history in 1896, M.A. in 1900, and B.D. in
1929. He was ordained deacon in 1902 and priest in 1903, was dean and tutor of
Emmanuel College 1903-7, and senior tutor and chaplain of Emmanuel College from
1907 to 1921. During the 1914-18 war he was senior chaplain to the guards
division and was awarded the military cross with bar. He was vicar of Christ
Church, East Greenwich from 1922 to 1926, chaplain to King George V from 1922 to
1929, and canon and sub-dean of Liverpool cathedral from 1926 to 1929. In
September 1929 he accepted the archbishopric of Melbourne, was consecrated in
Westminster Abbey on 1 November, and enthroned in St Paul's Cathedral, Melbourne
on 23 December.
In Melbourne, Head soon made himself acquainted with the various parishes and
clergy. He found a diocese that already had many commitments in connexion with
church schools and social work, and the financial depression which began just
about the time of his arrival made a strong forward policy inopportune. He
interested himself in the question of the re-union of the Christian churches,
and in the holding together of his own diocese by preaching peace and goodwill
to all, and setting a personal example of plain living and high thinking. At one
period he voluntarily gave up a quarter of his stipend, and refused to
countenance any expenditure which might lighten his own burden of work. If it
was possible to help a parish by attending some function or service he made it
his duty to be there, and his relations with his clergy were of the friendliest.
From 1933 he was chaplain general to the Commonwealth military forces. Tactful,
unassuming, and completely modest, scholarly and hard-working, much interested
in social questions, Head was a steady influence for good in Melbourne. On 7
December 1941 while travelling to a confirmation service his car, which he was
driving himself, ran into a post, and he died from his injuries on 18 December.
He married in 1904 Edith Mary Colman, who survived him with one son. He was the
author of The Fallen Stuarts, published in 1901, and Six Great
Anglicans, which appeared in 1929.
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