Michael Yelton Explained
Michael Yelton is an English lay authority of the history of the Church of England, particularly the Anglo-Catholic movement. He is secretary of the Anglo-Catholic History Society and a retired as a county court judge on 22 April 2020.[1]
Works
Monk, Writer and Artist: An Introduction to His Life and Work (2005)
- Alfred Hope Patten and the Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham (2006)
- Empty Tabernacles: Twelve Lost Churches of London (2006)
- Alfred Hope Patten: His Life and Times in Pictures (2007)
- Anglican Church-building in London 1915-1945 (2007)
- Anglican Papalism: An Illustrated History, 1900-1960 (2009)
- Outposts of the Faith: Anglo-Catholicism in Some Rural Parishes (2009)
- The Twenty One: An Anglo-Catholic Rebellion in London, 1929 (2009)
- The South India Controversy and the Converts of 1955-1956: An Episode in Recent Anglo-Catholic History (2010)
- An Anglo-Catholic Scrapbook, Produced to Mark the Tenth Anniversary of the Foundation of the Anglo-Catholic History Society (2010)
- Anglican Church-building in London 1946-2012 (2013)
- More Empty Tabernacles: Another Twelve Lost Churches of London (2014)
- (foreword), Anglican Abbot: Dom Denys Prideaux (2016)
- Martin Travers: His Life and Work (2016)
- St Silas, Pentonville: The First 150 Years (2017)
- Twenty Priests for Twenty Years: A Commemorative Volume to Mark the Twentieth Anniversary of the Anglo-Catholic History Society (2020)
- An Anglo-Catholic Miscellany (2021)
- The Community of Reparation to Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament and the Church of St Alphege, Southwark (2022)
- Alfred Hope Patten and the Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham (2022)
Notes and References
- Web site: Circuit Bench Retirement: Yelton . 2022-07-16 . www.judiciary.uk . 22 April 2020 . en-US.