Augustus Robert Buckland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rev. Augustus Robert Buckland (April 18, 1857–1942) was a British divine and writer.
He was born at Newport, Monmouthshire, educated at Pembroke College, Oxford (B.A., 1881), and was ordained to the priesthood of the Church of England in 1881. In 1883, Buckland married Annie Smith, daughter of David Smith. The couple had one son and three daughters.
Buckland was curate of Spitalfields, London, in 1880-84. In 1887 he became editor of the Record and subsequently engaged largely in journalistic work. He became morning preacher in the Foundling Hospital, London in 1890, and was secretary of the Religious Tract Society from 1902 to 1917. He was then Rector of Pulham at St. Mary Magdalene, 1917–1927, Archdeacon of Norfolk, 1920–1934, Residentiary Canon of Norwich, 1927–1934, and Honorary Canon of Norwich, 1935. He visited China and Japan in 1908.
He has written: Strayed East (London, 1889); The Patience of Two (1894); The Heroic in Missions (1894); John Horden, Missionary Bishop : a life on the shores of Hudson's Bay (1894); Women in the Mission Field (1895); The Confessional in the English Church (1900); The Missionary Speaker's Manual (1901, in collaboration with J. D. Mullins); Editor of Universal Bible Dictionary (1914); John Bunyan, The Man and his Work (1928); and George Anthony King. Knight (1928). In addition, he edited many works for the Religious Tract Society, notably its Devotional Commentary.
[edit] References
- Who's Who 1940
- This article includes content derived from the Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, 1914, which is in the public domain.