John Edwin Watts-Ditchfield (17 September 1861 – 14 July 1923)[1] was an eminent 20th century Anglican priest and distinguished author.[2]

Educated at the Victoria University of Manchester[3] and ordained in 1891,[4] he began his career with a curacy at St Peter Highgate[5] after which he was Vicar of St James-the-Less, Bethnal Green.[6] Here, he made a name for himself, particularly with the development of the Church of England's Men's Society. He believed that the contemporary view of the Church of England was that it was for women and children, and he succeeded in attracting vast numbers of men to his church whose families followed. A gifted fund-raiser, he provided a medical service and a parish centre among other facilities for his poor parishioners.[7] These activities brought him to the attention of not only the hierarchy but also of leading politicians. He was first considered for a bishopric when Lichfield became vacant in 1913, but he was not recommended by the Archbishop of Canterbury who wrote ‘Watts-Ditchfield with all his gifts is on a distinctly low plane. Not a graduate or a man of any mental calibre ... though a real power with working man and a very nice fellow’.[8] Nevertheless, when the diocese of Chelmsford was created the following year, Watts-Ditchfield was appointed as its first bishop.[9]

He was a vocal supporter of British involvement in the Great War but provoked controversy by permitting a woman to preach in a church, which at that time was frowned upon,[10] and by emphasising ‘our own sins’ such as intemperance, class divisions, housing deficiencies. At a time when the unity of the nation was essential in the middle of a war, whatever the merits of Watts-Ditchfield's convictions, they seemed inappropriate, and were denounced as a ‘Flood of nonsense’.[11]

Watts-Ditchfield, although not a graduate, had been a lecturer in Pastoral Theology at Cambridge just before the War and, during the later stages of the War, was a leading figure in the National Mission.[12]

He died in post in 1923. There is a statue to him within Chelmsford Cathedral.

References

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  1. ^ Obituary First Bishop Of Chelmsford The Times Monday, 16 July 1923; pg. 14; Issue 43394; col B
  2. ^ Amongst others he wrote "Fishers of Men", 1899; "Liturgies for Men's Services", 1901; "Here and Hereafter", 1911; "The Church in Action", 1913; "Reservation", 1917; and "The Church and Her Problems", 1920, British Library web site accessed 28 November 2009
  3. ^ “Who was Who” 1897–2007 London, A & C Black, 2007 ISBN 978-0-19-954087-7
  4. ^ "The Clergy List, Clerical Guide and Ecclesiastical Directory" London, John Phillips, 1900
  5. ^ Malden Richard (ed) (1920). Crockford's Clerical Directory for 1920 (51st edn). London: The Field Press. p. 264.
  6. ^ [1] Archived 9 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ C J Bearman, article in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, OUP
  8. ^ Lambeth Palace Library, Davidson X
  9. ^ Lambeth Palace Library, Davidson X
  10. ^ Chelmsford Diocesan Chronicle, September, 1916
  11. ^ ‘John Edwin Watts-Ditchfield’ by Ellis N Gowing, Hodder and Stoughton, 1926, p196
  12. ^ Chelmsford Diocesan Chronicle, March, 1916
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Church of England titles
New diocese Bishop of Chelmsford
1914–1923
Succeeded by