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Born in Co. Charles graduated with a B. He was ordained deacon at Swords parish church by the Archbishop of Dublin in June and was ordained priest in St. Three months later he succeeded Archdeacon Wall as Vicar of Emlaghfad i. Ballymote in the Diocese of Achonry. In an indenture appeared between the Bishop of Killala and himself, granting him a glebe of twenty acres. Charles died at Prussia Street, Dublin in Will dated May 8 ; proved March 12 Elizabeth almost immediately remarried, in about George Cartland born in about , Scholar, T. Vern: They had a son, George Gibson Cartland, who was born in about At this point the convolutions of family relationships become tortuous. Elizabeth took the 11 year old Norbury Phillips as a lodger and as a student for her son second Henry. Phillips, was a Royal Marines officer who had been with Captain Cook on his second and third journeys and played a heroic part in the incident in the Sandwich Islands in at which Cook met his death; Susan's brother James was on the same expedition and was a close friend. After their marriage they lived in the country, from at Mickleham, Surrey, where their three children were born Fanny Frances - , Norbury Charles Norbury, and Willy John William James when a postscript in a letter from Anne Augusta Maturin noted in July that at 'the death of poor William Phillips he left all property derivable from his ship to his niece Minette'. In a letter dated 7 November to her sister Fanny, Susan Phillips describes her arrival in Dublin;. It is a fine family and appears a remarkably affectionate one Mr Henry Maturin, Norbury's Master is only 3 or 4 and twenty and already a fellow of the college, and there is a son of about 17 whose name? I will tell you more of them another time, but I will not defer saying that I very much like the family and am more than satisfied with the manner in which my Norbury is treated He had returned shortly after his Papa was gone and was in ecstasy of joy I was told at hearing we were arrived, and so eager to meet with us Mrs Cartland had permitted her son George to set out with him for the Marine Hotel, in the way we had missed. By the marriage had begun to deteriorate, and it had all but collapsed by , when in June of that year, worried about the deteriorating political situation in Ireland and the threat of French invasion, Phillips decided to give up the house at Mickleham and to live on his Irish estate at Belcotton, near Drogheda, Co Louth; he had already placed Norbury with a private tutor, Henry Maturin, in Dublin. Susan was left behind to manage as best she could with the other two children, and lodged with her brothers James and Charles in turn. In the following summer Phillips returned to London, now insisting that Susan should accompany him back to Ireland and live with him at Belcotton. She did so very much against her will, in the knowledge that if she refused she would probably never see her children again. Here, lonely, virtually abandoned by her husband who by this time was openly conducting an affair with his distant cousin but near neighbour, Jane Brabazon , cut off from contact with her family and friends, and in poor health, she lived at Belcotton until almost the end of her life. By members of her family realised the full gravity of Susan's situation, and in the autumn were finally successful in persuading Phillips to allow her to return to England. She left Belcotton with Fanny and Willy in early December, by now in very poor health. On arriving in Dublin she had to take to her bed, and was not able to continue her journey until the end of the month. After a crossing of the Irish sea she landed at Parkgate the alternative port to Holyhead for crossings to and from Ireland, on the Dee estuary near Chester at the end of December. Her brother Charles was despatched to meet her and bring her home to London, but it was too late. She died at Parkgate on 6 January The Dictionary of National Biography records him as brevet-major, ; brevet-lieutenant-colonel ; resided at Boulogne till after the French Revolution and on returning to France in was seized by Napoleon and detained until ; became acquainted with Charles Lamb and his friends. He died of cholera in his home in Lambeth in September The Phillips family was closely allied to the Shirleys. Charles and grandson of Dean Gabriel James Maturin was born in He became a scholar in and graduated with a B. Meanwhile his younger brother, Henry, entered Trinity at the age of 16 in January and chased Gabriel through the College becoming a scholar in and graduating in the summer of Henry was undoubtedly a brilliant scholar, destined for the church. There is no evidence that Gabriel considered the Church as a career but there is a later indication that he may have had some legal training 2. Gabriel and his brother Henry moved in a controversial set in Dublin. Henry had been made a Fellow at Trinity in at the age of He was also a chaplain to the College chapel, but he associated with Walter Shirley , son of Walter Shirley, the Rector of Loughrea. Walter Shirley senior was out on the evangelical wing of the Church and very close to the Methodists who were at that time challenging the established church; he was a younger brother of the 4th, 5th and 6th Earls Ferrers and first cousin to the Countess of Huntingdon who established the Huntingdon Connection in opposition to Charles Wesley's version of Methodism - and lost. John Walker , graduated at Trinity in and became increasingly Calvinistic, eventually taking his splinter group of Walkerites to London. Thomas Kelly, also at Trinity from to , is renowned as a prolific writer of hymns whose evangelical zeal led to him being banned from the Church of Ireland. Walker, Kelly, Henry and Walter Shirley junior formed an energetic quartet which made itself so popular with its evangelical sermons, attracting enormous congregations to its forthright presentations of the Gospel, that in the Bishop of Dublin banned all of them from preaching in his diocese. Shortly afterwards Henry abandoned Dublin and his Fellowship at Trinity College to take an appointment in the far north of Donegal, riding through the tensions leading up to the rebellion to the poorest parish in Ireland on Fannet Head where the rector had just been murdered by rebels: he stayed there until he died 44 years later. Mayo; Walker preached his ultra-strict Calvinism in Dublin until when he was expelled from his connections with Trinity and he departed for new pastures in London - where Gabriel caught up with him 25 years later. The marriage was short-lived. Peters, Aungier Street on 29 September 5. Jane made her will on 23 March ; it was proved on 11 May Ireland was straining at change. Catholic insurrection had been simmering for a year before and had frightened many. Great uncertainty had been created by the threatened Act of Union, which would abolish the Irish Parliament and take direct rule to London; it had been fiercely debated for years before being finally passed in The couple left for England almost immediately and their first son, Charles Henry, was born in Bath on 4 September 6. Brother and sister maintained a correspondence for the rest of their lives, though much of that was from Anne Augusta reminding Walter that her dividends from the tontine invested in by their father had been delayed - again. The young family was at Orlingbury, Northamptonshire in August when their second son George Browne was born. It must be that by Gabriel and Augusta had formulated the strategy to have their two elder boys admitted to Eton and set on the path to Kings College, Cambridge and careers in the Church. In July of that year, to the surprise of the minister, both boys walked in to the College Church at Eton for what must have been a second baptism. The class sizes at the college were so large that little could be learned by individuals and many parents paid for extra tuition, often from assistant masters at the College, but at this time also from individuals who set up rooms and student lodgings in town. These tutors had no status with the College and no records of them were kept but wealthy and aristocratic families would automatically engage an exclusive private tutor. For King Henry the function of the Cambridge College was to pray for his soul and supply clergy to churches throughout his realm who would do likewise; until the 's all entrants to King's were exclusively from Eton. The family remained in Eton until around with Gabriel described as a private tutor on the baptism registrations for:. Charles Henry went up to Kings College in April , graduated in , received his MA and was ordained as deacon in George Browne followed him in July , graduating in France was the fashionable place to be. By December Gabriel and Anne Augusta had moved the Maturin family to Paris where Gabriel and Charles established a school to tutor the sons of the well-to-do and ambitious British who scented rich pickings as France recovered from defeat at Waterloo. In his letter home he says 'The Maturins were extremely kind and useful - they live in a very scrambling manner, but not with much intentional extravagance. Walter is good natured, but rather a pickle - There is also a very nice clever little girl about 11 years of age - Mrs Maturin looks thin and aged - Mr Maturin is very plausible - he gives me the idea of a man who really would have been a kind thoughtful man of talents if he had not brought himself into circumstances which rendered it expedient for him to leave off wearing a conscience - with the most pious intention, no doubt , of resuming it at some more convenient season - I was grieved to put myself under such obligations to him, but really could not help it. In Paris, the French language is acquired in all its purity, and with the best accent, in a shorter time and with greater ease than elsewhere. Charles Maturin, of No. His father also, who has been distinguished by high University honours, and resided as Tutor above twelve years at Eton, is his chief assistant - while all that devolves upon female care … is secured by the superintendance of his mother and sisters. Both Gabriel and Charles were recorded as living in Paris when, in a court case heard in London on 30 June , they pursued a failed money-order from a fashionable pupil, James William Poyntz. But that city was a dangerous place to be; in July a violent mini-revolution forced Charles X to abdicate and flee to England to be replaced by Louis-Philippe. In and '32 Hugo's Les Miserables rebellion was brewing. The family returned to London in late Gabriel renewed his acquaintance with John Walker from Dublin. Walker had been recruited to teach at the London University School which was set up by the newly established University of London. That first College in England to challenge the ancient traditions at Oxford and Cambridge was based on secular principles but was then suffering a financially disastrous shortfall in the numbers of students. The School was founded to supply students to the University. It was to follow a similar non-religious path to the new University with a traditional classical education, include modern languages unusually German as well as French , fencing, gymnastics and dancing - but corporal punishment was not permitted. That October, as required by the Council, Walker took responsibility for the lease of 16 Gower Street in his own name. The salaries were to be paid from the students fees so that the school became effectively his business. Among others he appointed Gabriel and Charles to assist with the boys. Walker was stubborn and refused to go as he had not received his proper six-months notice. The Council could not remove him as the lease did not expire until Lady Day He determined to stay in the premises as an independent foundation. Walker was determined to make mischief. These facilities were offered in The Times through January and February. From that date Walker was still listed as either a Classics or Mathematics Master but may have decided that having a newly-ordained Reverend headmaster was more impressive to prospective clients when his bankruptcy was about to become public knowledge again with proceedings eventually Gazetted on 13 May He was Walker returned to Ireland in and died in Dublin shortly afterwards. J W Niblock had taken over as headmaster and there is no mention of any other staff. Even now the remaining Georgian houses indicate that this was an area which would have appealed to the standards desired by the niece of the 6th Earl Ferrers. The house had sufficient accommodation for the whole family. The census lists a teacher, five pupils and two servants living there in addition to Anne, Augusta and Ellen. The extra income will doubtless have been welcome. That violence was prevented by military intervention. Charles Henry was living at home. Gabriel James had returned from his Spanish adventures and may well have already taken up a posting with the Birmingham Police as his daughter Ellen was in the household in George Browne, Henrietta and Walter had all died. On 13 February that wish was granted but only after another two months intense suffering. While one came back another two left the family home. When there was no further obligation Charles left education to resume his Fellowship at Kings and pursue his vocation in the Church. The census notes him as living the cloistered bachelor life in College and he remained at Cambridge until being presented to be Vicar of Ringwood and Rector of Harbridge, Hampshire in The College archivist observes that the date of baptism was often used in that Roll - which then leaves a question mark about the second baptism in Charles Henry and his brother George Browne were christened at the ages of 4 and 5, to the surprise of the incumbent when he saw them walking into Eton church, on 27 July It is surmised that this may have been a second baptism and a ploy to ease the boys' admittance to Eton as 'Oppidans' in April Charles Henry went up to Cambridge on 28 April , matriculated at Easter , was elected a Fellow in , received his B. There is no further mention of Charles' marriage to the frothy Miss Lucy mentioned in the letter from Walter Augustus Shirley note 10 above so it must be assumed that the marriage did not take place, even though the Lucy and Maturin families were close neighbours in Edgbaston 13 years later. This advert was repeated several times until on 16 April they moved round the corner to Tavistock House, Tavistock Square and changed name to The London High School. Attending from 9. Gabriel and the Mathematics and English tutor, Mr B B Wyand, also offered to take in boarders, in much the same way as Gabriel must have done at Eton and possibly Paris for 60 guineas per annum to age 10 and 70 guineas thereafter, including the school fees. The large house at Tavistock Square, with its extensive playground and 'pleasure grounds' was claimed to give pupils 'all the advantages of a country residence'. Discipline was maintained 'without recourse, in any instance, to corporal punishment'. In the last advert placed on 26 August Charles is noted as the Rector. The name of 'Charles Maturin' was eye-catching marketing for the school as the Gothic Horror plays and books of Charles Robert Maturin including 'Melmoth the Wanderer', 'Fredolfo' and 'Women; or Pour et Contre' were still in the public consciousness with regular advertisements in The Times. This school must have been a logical extension of Gabriel's experience at Eton and in Paris and to have been a forerunner of Charles' later teaching in Birmingham. He had been ordained priest for the diocese of Lincoln in but does not appear to have been installed in a parish as there is a note in a letter from his mother to her brother that he was teaching at the school near Edgbaston during the Chartist riots in July The premises had been taken over as a barracks for the military so he was taking holiday away from the disturbances. His father's death may have allowed Charles to resume his scholarly life at Cambridge as he was appointed Senior Proctor for Kings College in , being presented to Her Majesty in that capacity at a reception of Addresses from the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge at Buckingham Palace on 5 February though both he and his fellow Proctor, Mr Dalten, were absent on 6 November so that deputies had to be appointed. The senior and junior proctors were responsible for policing the behaviour of the students within the college and in the town among many other duties which included the apprehension of prostitutes! He was then appointed a Taxor for the University on 13 October ; two Taxors looked after the interests of the students in the matter of the board and lodging in the town to make sure that they were not overcharged or under-provided. The manorial estate included several parcels of land in the town, including what are now Kingsfield and College Road. From until the vicar at Ringwood was appointed from Fellows of the College who had been Scholars at Eton John Turpin, vicar since , is a graduate of King's. As lay-rector the Provost and Fellows must have been worried by the state of the church as high piecemeal expenditure had not achieved a lasting solution to the problems described in Ted Baker's 'Ringwood Church Rebuild'. In Samuel Berney Vince, vicar since , died. The College appointed their senior ordained Fellow, Charles Henry, to that living and the rectory of Harbridge traditionally associated so that the vicar would have some tithe income and he was inducted on 31 December The appointment was valuable. The Maturin family, comprising Charles, his mother Anne Augusta, his sister Augusta and niece Ellen Augusta, moved in to the Vicarage opposite the church. She was born in Cork, Ireland in and died on 17 July Anne Francis, whose mother, Anne, had died shortly after her birth, was the daughter of Charles' Royal Navy brother, William, who had died of cholera in London in She was taken in and later married the boy-next-door, Henry Samuel Davy from the family of solicitors in the Market Square. The family also gave help to another cousin when Benjamin Maturin, ordained son of the dedicated Henry who moved to Donegal in , lost his wife after the birth of their son, Henry. After eight years in the wilderness, moving from parish to parish in Ireland and England with his growing lad, he took the curacy at Ringwood from to ; he was then appointed to the living at Lymington where he remained for the rest of his long life. It took five years' work to get the vestry to agree to an Architect's report in and then another three years before reconstruction could start. It had been planned to retain the tower and some of the old building but it became quickly obvious that only the tower could be saved, even that became the subject of heated and lengthy technical debate, and the rest of the structure was demolished. Such building projects are often the source of confrontation and dispute. Such will needs leadership and from all the reports it appears that Charles Henry gave that in a diplomatic but firm manner. He was absolutely secure in his humanity and faith that it was right to provide the environment for every person, young or old, rich or poor, to come to his ministry. That, and the spirit of the age, transformed the attitude of the town from downright antagonism and obstruction in to jubilation at the reconsecration of the new church in May The church was designed with galleries above the north and south aisles and above the west door to seat instead of the previous It had been intended that of the new seats would be free but conditions on grants towards the building costs ensured that there would be no charges at all. As the church today can only seat , even allowing for the absence of the gallery, it must have been something of a crush - in pews with even less leg-room than now - to fit in so many. Charles Henry worked tirelessly. The Salisbury Journal reported that he was ' Amongst the poor his loss will be severely felt, as his charity was unlimited where he found deserving worth without regard to???? In his manner he was kind, courteous and affable to all On the Friday 17 January , at the Vicarage, he had a stroke and died the same day. Immediately shops throughout the town, of all denominations of owners, put up their shutters for the rest of the day. The funeral, held the following Thursday, 'was attended by a greater number of persons than we ever recollect to have seen in this town on any similar occasion, it being calculated that not less than assembled to witness the obsequies of one, who by his many good qualities, kindness of heart, charity and liberal disposition, had succeeded in winning the affectionate love and regard of his parishioners; nor was this feeling confined to the members of his own congregation but it was disseminated throughout every congregation of Dissenters, no matter of what religious creed or persuasion, for on the melancholy of his burial all seemed to unite in one general feeling to pay the last tribute of respect to the memory of departed worth. At half past eleven the mournful procession was seen issuing from the Vicarage, headed by the Court of the Ancient Order of Foresters belonging to this town, of which the deceased was an honorary member, and each one seemed to feel as if he had sustained an individual loss by the death of their departed friend and brother. The pall was borne by the Rev. C H Cheales, the Rev. H M Wilkinson, Robt. B Maturin, incumbent of Lymington, who was cousin to the deceased, and the Rev. C Hatch, Vicar of Fordingbridge, followed as chief mourners after which came a train of upwards of 60 persons, attired in deep mourning, amongst whom were the Rev. On arriving at the church the Foresters opened right and left and the procession entered and from the numerous persons that had assembled to witness the mournful ceremony some considerable time was occupied in each one being seated so enormous was the congregation. The service was read in a most solemn and impressive manner by the Rev. Joseph Harriman?? On depositing the body in the vault not an eye could be scarcely seen but what was dimmed with a tear, whilst on the features of many, they flowed copiously; and never did the grave close over the remains of one in this parish whose memory will be longer cherished and kept alive by the recollections of the many virtues and good qualities that adorned the name of him whose obsequies had on that day been performed. The sixth bell had already been recast in his honour at the rebuilding of the church but as a memorial the congregation and town replaced the plain glass in the chancel sanctuary windows both north and south walls with 'handsome stained glass' with 'four beautiful illustrations' of The Sermon on the Mount, Christ Blessing the Little Children, Our Saviour's Charge to St Peter and Christ Walking upon the Water. A brass tablet in a block of black marble was also placed on the wall of the south aisle:. Who died on the 17th January , in the 63rd year of his age. During sixteen years he was Vicar of this parish and Rector of Harbridge; And by many virtues secured the love and esteem of all classes of his parishioners and friends, Who have erected this tablet, together with two windows, In the chancel of this church, As a tribute of their affectionate remembrance of him And of their regret At his loss. Charles' mother had died on 10 March and been buried in the railed, vaulted tomb between the east wall of the chancel and Church Hatch. At his death his sister, Augusta, who had spent her life supporting all he had done and being an essential part of every bazaar and fund-raising effort in the parish, was left adrift at the age of No more is known of her until she appears in the census at a lodging house in Leamington Spa as a 'Proprietor of Stocks' with her sister Frances Charlotte now a widow - Fulton a couple of miles away in Warwick; Augusta died in and Frances in William Francis had died of cholora at 43 as mentioned. Another sister, Henrietta, had married and gone to Santo Domingo but died at the age of Washington Shirley Maturin had married his cousin Elizabeth Phillips in Paris but their only daughter died aged 16; Washington was Rector of Thurgarten, Norfolk until he died in Another brother, Gabriel James had been a Captain in the 2nd Lancers, serving in Spain and South America, but then came home to be a Superintendant in the Birmingham Police until he emigrated to Australia and died there childless aged 53 in Walter also died as a teenager. Of Anne Augusta's large family only one grandaughter, Frances who had married Henry Davy, survived to have children of her own. Anne Augusta would not have seen this as tragedy; she was certain of heaven for herself and all those about her. Her daughter Augusta wrote ' As this world receded the glories of that to come opened to the view with redoubled brightness'. Probably this represents the establishment of a fixed stipend for the 'ordinary' lecturers already in existence. They were to lecture to all the university without fees -- and in mid-term were to pray publicly for the soul of Sir Robert and of his wife, for whom the university also performed annual exequies. Appointed at the same time, but from an earlier date, were lecturers in mathematics who, for convenience, are listed here also. The names of early lecturers survive only randomly, but there are more to be found than here appear, but it is apparent that they often held office for more than one year. Ordained deacon , priest Died at Malta sic. Magna Britannia Charles took part in but held no office. William rushed from his ship in Sheerness, despite that he might have missed the sailing and therefore forfeited his position, but he arrived too late on the day she died. Qualified as R. Paymaster and Purser 9 Nov He died in London of cholera Aug 15, aged 43 sic but must be Left one daughter:. Solicitor, of Ringwood, he was born in Ringwood, Sept 20, died April 5, ; brother of Elizabeth Grace Davy who married Henry Maturin by whom she had 10 children. She died June 9, In the Census the family comprised Died in St. Domingo, aged Rector of Thurgarten, Norfolk Alum Cantab She died Oct 29, , aged He died Oct 5 aged Their only child,. Died May 4, There were problems over pay and on 28 September Colonel Jacks and all his officers in the 2nd Lancers, British Legion at San Sebastian, Spain, including Gabriel, were petitioning for justice from the British Government which had 'espoused and forwarded' the cause in Spain. No trace has so far been found of a marriage but a daughter, Ellen Augusta, was born in Cork in about As a witness at a trial in London of the instigators of an attempted coup in Ecuador in January Gabriel was described as 'military-man who wore a large moustache'; as a cavalry officer he had been promised a squadron of cavalry when they reached Ecuador and he duly reported for duty on 24 November The expedition never sailed. He married Margaret King in first quarter of in Marylebone, London. He emigrated to Australia. Died at Collingwood, Melbourne Sept 16, , aged 54 of cancer of the tongue. His death certificate declares that he was 11 years in Victoria but that he was aged 35 when he married Margaret in Died of Dyspnea a catchall phrase covering lung problems and asthma aggravated by spinal curvature at Ringwood on 20 July aged No issue. She resides in England. Died July Gabriel's grandchildren. Dean Gabriel's eldest son Charles , his eldest son Gabriel and his family. Henry , Charles' second son, and his descendants. Captain Gabriel second son of Dean Gabriel James. Gabriel , his son Peter and grandson Gabriel James The Maturin and Johnston Families. In a letter dated 7 November to her sister Fanny, Susan Phillips describes her arrival in Dublin; '.. The family remained in Eton until around with Gabriel described as a private tutor on the baptism registrations for: both Henrietta Georgiana and William Francis on 23 October Gabriel James on 5 October and Walter Augustus on 9 June For the baptism of Frances Charlotte on 15 June the family had moved to Upton cum Chalvey 8. Vicar of Ringwood The appointment was valuable. Ringwood CofE school Charles Henry worked tirelessly. A brass tablet in a block of black marble was also placed on the wall of the south aisle: In memory of The Rev Charles Henry Maturin, M. Davy aged 19 in 4 Evelyn F. Davy, aged 8 5 Charlotte A. Davy, aged 6 6 Bishop O. Davy, aged 5 7 William H. Davy, aged 3 8 Isabel M. Charles, Gabriel and his family. Charles Henry. The Maturin Arms awarded to Peter in Gabriel's grandchildren including Peter , his son Peter , Dean Gabriel James daughters and the Quinan connection. William c third son of Dean Gabriel and his family.
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