Robert Walker (1709–1802), called Wonderful Walker, was an unassuming Church of England priest in Dunnerdale, now in Cumbria. William and Dorothy Wordsworth became interested in the local stories about him, around 1804; William mentioned Walker in The Excursion, and later in one of his sonnets.[1]
Walker was born at Undercrag in Seathwaite, Dunnerdale, Furness, then in Lancashire, in 1709, the son of Nicholas Walker, a yeoman farmer, and his wife Elizabeth, the youngest of 12 children; his eldest brother was born about 1684. He was taught at an elementary level in Seathwaite Chapel. Regarded as frail by his parents, he sought more education and ordination, in Eskdale and the Vale of Lorton, with support from clerical patrons.[1] [2]
Walker was schoolmaster in Loweswater in 1735, when he became curate of Seathwaite. In 1755–6, he proposed to the bishop of Chester that the curacy of Ulpha should be joined to that of Seathwaite, but was turned down.[1] A few years later the curacy was slightly enlarged.[2]
Walker farmed his glebe land, and laboured for other farmers.[1] He earned small sums as scrivener to the surrounding villages. He also acted as schoolmaster, for gifts rather than charging fees.[2]
Walker died on 25 June 1802, and was buried in Seathwaite churchyard. His tombstone later had a new inscription cut, and a brass was erected to his memory in Seathwaite chapel. He left £1500 or £2000 in savings.[1] [2]
Walker dressed and lived simply. His life was sketched by William Wordsworth, who alluded to his grave in The Excursion (bk. vii. ll. 351 sq.), and in the eighteenth sonnet of The River Duddon, A Series of Sonnets (1820) ("Seathwaite Chapel") referred to Walker as the "Gospel Teacher
"Nor was it merely as an exemplary parish priest, (and well does Robert Walker deserve the title of Priest of the Lakes [...]), that the character of this good man is to be regarded, but as one striking instance out of many (if the history of our Parish Priesthood could now be written) in which the true liturgical teaching of the church was strictly maintained in the lower ranks of the clergy, when it had been either totally discontinued or had withered down to a mere lifeless form, in the higher."[3]
Edwin Waugh included an account of Walker in his Rambles in the Lake Country and its Borders from 1861.[4] In 1892, Samuel Barber wrote that "The wonderful Walker type of parson may be considered about as extinct as the Dodo."[5]
Walker and his wife Ann (née Tyson, died 1800, at age around 93) had ten children, of whom eight survived to adulthood, three sons and five daughters. With an income as priest calculated as £20 per annum in 1755, as well as other ways of making money, Walker supported his family by spinning wool; which became a family business, Walker carrying the yarn to market himself.[1] [2] [6]
The eldest son, Zaccheus Walker (1736–1808), joined Boulton and Watt and married Mary Boulton, sister of Matthew Boulton.[1] [7] Their only daughter married Joseph Vincent Barber.[8] Another son, who predeceased his father, was William Tyson Walker. He was a curate and schoolteacher at Ulverston, where one of his pupils was the future Sir John Barrow, 1st Baronet. Barrow remembered him, around 1777, as a good classical scholar, educated at Trinity College, Dublin.[9] [10] [11]