Edward Healy Thompson Explained

Edward Healy Thompson (1813, Oakham, Rutland - 21 May 1891, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire) was an English Roman Catholic writer.

Life

Thompson was the son of Robert and Mary Costall Thompson. His father was a tax surveyor successively at Oakham, Bath, and Salisbury. The poet Francis Thompson was his nephew.[1]

He was educated at Oakham School and Emmanuel College, Cambridge. Having taken Anglican orders, he obtained a curacy at Calne, Wiltshire.[2] The clergyman poet William Lisle Bowles was a neighbour in nearby Bremhill.

After some years of the Anglican ministry at Marylebone, Ramsgate, and elsewhere, he became a Catholic in 1846. He published as his defence, "Remarks on certain Anglican Theories of Unity" (1846).[3]

In 1851, jointly with James Spencer Northcote he undertook the editorship of the series of controversial pamphlets known as The Clifton Tracts. He was a contributor and sub-editor of the Dublin Review from 1863 to early 1865,[4] but he and Henry James Coleridge left when editor William George Ward refused to publish a major article on the reviews of John Henry Newman's Apologia Pro Vita Sua. Ward was inclined to give the book as little publicity as possible.[5]

In the mid-1880s, he lived on Hinde Street, Manchester Square. He was a contributor to Wilfrid Meynell's Merrie England magazine. The latter years of his life, which were spent at Cheltenham, he devoted to religious literature.[3]

Works

Thompson was a promoter of Catholic literature. Most of this work consisted in the adaptations of foreign books which he thought were of value to English-speaking Catholics.

His chief works are:

He also translated several works by Henri-Marie Boudon:

Family

On 30 July 1844 at Marylebone, he married Harriet Diana Calvert, daughter of Nicholson Calvert of Hunsdon and Frances Pery, daughter and co-heir of the Viscount Pery. Born at Hunsdon, Hertfordshire, 1811; Harriet died at Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, 21 Aug., 1896. On her husband's conversion she also joined the Catholic Church, and like him devoted herself to literary work. Her chief work is the "Life of Charles Borromeo", but she also wrote stories of Catholic life. These include: "Mary, Star of the Sea" (1848); "The Witch of Malton Hill"; "Mount St. Lawrence" (1850); "Winefride Jones" (1854); "Margaret Danvers" (1857); "The Wyndham Family" (1876); and others, as well as articles in the Dublin Review.

Sources

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=pko7AQAAMAAJ&dq=Edward+Healy+Thompson&pg=PA2 Meynell, Everard. The Life of Francis Thompson, Burnes & Oates, 1916, p. 3
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=8987AQAAIAAJ&dq=Harriet+Diana+Thompson&pg=PA354 The Pedigree Register, Volume 2 (George Frederick Tudor Sherwood, ed.) 1913, p. 354
  3. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/14703a.htm Burton, Edwin. "Thompson." The Catholic Encyclopedia
  4. https://books.google.com/books?id=4j_S2oRpMX4C&dq=Edward+Healy+Thompson&pg=PA1577 Houghton, Walter E., The Wellesley Index to Victorian Periodicals 1824-1900, Routledge, 2013, p. 1577
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=mOOVDRj1SIsC&dq=Edward+Healy+Thompson&pg=PA45 Newman, John Henry. Apologia Pro Vita Sua and Six Sermons, (Frank M. Turner, ed.) Yale University Press, 2008, Intro. p. 45, n.67