George Ratcliffe Woodward

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George Ratcliffe Woodward (27 December 18483 March 1934) was born at 26, Hamilton Square, Birkenhead and educated in Elstree, Hertfordshire, then Harrow School. In 1867 he won a Sayer Scholarship to Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, graduating in 1872, third class in the Classics Tripos.

On 21 Dec 1874 he was ordained deacon by the Bishop of London, to serve as Assistant Curate at St Barnabas, Pimlico. In Sept 1882 he moved to Little Walsingham with Houghton St Giles’, in Norfolk. Woodward played the ‘cello, and the euphonium, sometimes in procession. Other hobbies included bellringing and beekeeping. In 1889 he married Alice Dorothy Lee Warner, at St Barnabas, Pimlico, having moved to Chelmondiston, near Ipswich, in 1888.

In 1893, Woodward published ‘Carols for Christmas-Tide, Series II’. His wife Alice died in Oct 1893, and was buried in Walsingham. In 1894, Woodward published ‘Carols for Easter and Ascension-tide, with one original composition: ‘This joyful Eastertide’. In 1894 Woodward resigned as Rector of Chelmondiston, to return to St Barnabas’ Pimlico, as Assistant Priest and Precentor.

Woodward helped create the St Barnabas Choral Society, and continued his interests in carols and plainsong. In 1897 he published ‘Hymns and Carols for Christmas-tide’, and in 1898 produced ‘Legends of the Saints’, and then in 1902 and 1903 ‘The Seven Sleepers of Ephesus’ and ‘Poemata’. In 1899 Woodward left St Barnabas to edit the ‘Cowley Carol Book’.

In 1904 ‘Songs of Syon’ was published, and In 1910 Woodward’s edition of ‘Piae Cantiones’, compiled for the Plainsong and Medieval Music Society. In 1917, he jointly wrote ‘The Acathist Hymn of the Holy Orthodox Church in the Original Greek Text and done into English Verse’. In 1920, collaborating with Charles Wood, ‘An Italian Carol Book’ was published. In 1922, ‘Hymns of the Greek Church’.

In 1924, Woodward and Wood published ‘A Cambridge Carol Book. Being Fifty-two Songs for Christmas, Easter and Other Seasons’. It included Ding Dong Merrily on High. The same year Woodward received an honorary Lambeth Doctorate in Music. Woodward died in 1934 aged 86. The exact location of his grave is unknown.