William Pye Baddeley was an Anglican priest who was the Dean
of Brisbane from 1958 to 1967.
He was born in Shropshire on 20 March 1914, the son of the
French singer Louise Bourdin. His mother had married a composer, William
Clinton-Baddeley, in 1896, with whom she had several children, including the
actresses Angela and Hermione Baddeley. By 1914 Clinton-Baddeley had left, and
Bourdin had taken in lodgers. It was to one of these, known only as 'Uncle
Pye', that William Bye Baddeley was born. The young William was given away to a
family in Fulham, where his birth was registered. Unlike his half-sisters, who
were educated privately, Baddeley was educated at a local school. He drifted
into the orbit of the Rev Cyril Easthaugh at St John the Divine, Kennington.
Eastaugh arranged for Baddeley to attend a crammer at Tatterford, Norfolk, run
by the Rev William Hand (whose son David would become the first Archbishop of
the Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea).
From Tatterford he went on to St Chad's College, Durham and
trained for ordination at Cuddesdon, Oxford. He was ordained deacon in 1941 and
priest in 1942, and served curacies at St Luke's, Camberwell (1941-1944), St
Anne's Church, Wandsworth (1944-1946) and St Stephen's Church, Bournemouth
(1946-1949).
He was then appointed Vicar of St Pancras (1949–58), for
whose restoration he is credited with having raised £60,000. During that time,
he was also Chaplain to the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital (1949-1958) and
St Luke's Hospital for the Clergy (1952-1954). In 1958 he was appointed Dean of
Brisbane. Upon his return to England, he was Rector of St James's, Piccadilly
from 1967 to 1980, during which period restoration of Sir Christopher Wren's
spire was completed after bombing in the war. He was Chaplain to the Royal
Academy of Arts (1968–80), Chairman of the Malcolm Sargent Cancer Fund for
Children (1968–92) and a Life Governor of the Thomas Coram Foundation for
Children from 1955.
He was also active in Australian civic life when he was in
Brisbane, being active in the arts as President of the Brisbane Repertory
Theatre (1961–64) and Director of the Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust
(1963–67), and making television and other media appearances to which "the
Australian public responded, as had his English audiences, to his joie de
vivre"; as Sir James Killen recalled, "There was nothing sedating
about his sermons."
He died on 31 May 1998.
No comments:
Post a Comment