Constance Coltman (née Todd; born 1889 and died 1969) was one of the first women ordained to Christian ministry in Britain, when she was ordained by the Congregational Union of England and Wales at the King's Weigh House (Congregational Church), London, on 17 September 1917. Her husband, Claud Coltman, was ordained alongside her, the day before their marriage. (A decade earlier Gertrude von Petzold became minister at Narborough Road Free Christian (Unitarian) church, Leicester, after studying at Manchester College, Oxford. A generation earlier, in 1880, the Glasgow Universalists ordained Caroline Soule.[1])
Constance Todd grew up in a Presbyterian family, and went to read history in Somerville College, Oxford, after attending Saint Felix School, Southwold.
She became conscious of her call to ministry, but was told that it would be impossible in the Presbyterian Church of England. In 1909, the Congregational Council considered the question of ordaining women, after discussions on the possibility of women deacons and elders occurred in the Presbyterian and Congregational churches. The principal of the (then) Congregational college, Mansfield College, Oxford, W. B. Selbie, was persuaded that her call was genuine and accepted her as a student there, where she obtained her London Bachelor of Divinity degree.
Her candidacy for the Ministry of Word and Sacraments was tested and accepted by the King's Weigh House congregation in Mayfair, in 1917. After her ordination, presided by W. E. Orchard (a Presbyterian who later became a Roman Catholic priest) and assisted by Congregationalist ministers, she ministered there jointly with her husband, Claud Coltman.
The two of them ministered in Kilburn, Oxford, Wolverton, and Haverhill, returning in King's Weigh House after World War II. Both were convinced pacifists throughout their lives. Her last pastorate was Cowley Road Congregational Church in Oxford.
She was not a campaigner, but supported younger women who felt called to ministry, and helped found the Fellowship of Women Ministers and the Society for the Ministry of Women. She was a friend of the Anglican supporter of women's ordination, Maude Royden, and contributed a chapter to Royden's book The Church and Women (1924).