Thomas Field

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Thomas Field was born on 9 November 1855 and died 20 May 1936. He was a priest in the Church of England.

He was the son of Thomas Field of Folkestone, a draper.

He was a distinguished Oxford "classic", he taught at Repton School and Harrow School from 1878 to 1886, and had been Headmaster of The King's School, Canterbury from 1886 to 1897, before becoming warden of Radley College 1897 to 1913.

He was described in those days as being tall, ponderous and swarthy, with a mighty chest and close cut black beard, a man of invincible energy. He was truly the picture of the Victorian Headmaster.

People recall a man of elephantine memory, whose singing was an unmelodious roar. A delightful but apocryphal tale is told of Field's days at Radley - that he was left, owing to a sudden conspiratorial silence, to blare forth alone - 'I am a worm and no man'.

He was ordained into the Church of England in 1880. He was appointed Vicar of St. Mary's Church, Nottingham on 28 July 1913 and he held this post until 1926. He was a Canon of Southwell Minster from 1913 until 1936.

Religious titles
Preceded by
Arthur Hamilton Baynes
Vicar of St.Mary's Church, Nottingham
1913–1926
Succeeded by
James Geoffrey Gordon

[edit] References

Thomas Field DD A Memoir by H S Goodrich, SPCK 1937.