John Woodhouse (priest)

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John Chappel Woodhouse

John Chappel Woodhouse[a] (1749 – 17 November 1833) was an English Anglican priest who was Archdeacon of Salop from 17 October 1798 until 24 December 1821;[1] and Dean of Lichfield from 1807 until his death.[2]

Woodhouse was born at

Stoke on Trent.[6]

In 1849, he published Woodhouse's Annotations on the Apocalypse, which was well received. He married Mercy Peate (or Peet), with whom he had a son, Chappel Woodhouse (1780–1815), who married Amelia Oakeley, daughter of Sir Charles Oakeley, 1st Baronet; and two daughters, Ellen Jane and Mary Anne. His daughter Ellen marriaged firstly, Rev. William Robinson, Rector of Swinnerton; secondly, Hugh Dyke Acland, second son of Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, 9th Baronet; and thirdly, Richard Hinckley of Beacon House, Lichfield.[4]

Woodhouse died on 17 November 1833.[7]

Bibliography

  • Woodhouse, John Chappel (1805). The Apocalypse : or Revelation of Saint John, translated; with notes, critical and explanatory. London: J. Brettell.
  • Woodhouse, John Chappel (1811). A short account of Lichfield Cathedral; more particularly of the painted glass with which its windows are adorned. Lichfield: T.G. Lomax.
  • Woodhouse, John Chappel (1834). A short account of the city and close of Lichfield: to which is added a short account of the cathedral. Lichfield: T.G. Lomax.

Notes

  1. ^ His middle name is frequently misspelt Chappell.

References

  1. ^ Shropshire Parish registers. Diocese of Lichfield. Phillimore, W.P.W. (Ed) Lichfield, Shropshire Parish Register Society, 1913
  2. ^ Journals of the House of Lords, Volume 59 p176
  3. ^ National Archives
  4. ^ a b Burke, John (1836). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland. Henry Colburn. p. 614. Retrieved 8 February 2020.
  5. Alumni Oxonienses: the Members of the University of Oxford, 1715–1886. Oxford: Parker and Co – via Wikisource
    .
  6. ^ The Later Correspondence of George III, Aspinall, A. (Ed) Volume 3 p506: Cambridge, CUP, 1968
  7. ^ "Death of the Dean of Lichfield". Staffordshire Advertiser. 23 November 1833. p. 3. Retrieved 28 July 2019 – via British Newspaper Archive.