Stephen Moulsdale Explained

Stephen Moulsdale
Term Start1:1904
Term End1:1937
Predecessor1:Founded
Office2:Principal of St Chad's Hostel, Hooton Pagnell
Term Start2:1904
Term End2:1916
Successor2:Closed
Term Start3:1934
Term End3:1937
Successor3:Robert Bolam
Birth Name:Stephen Richard Platt Moulsdale
Birth Date:18 August 1872
Nationality:Irish
Spouse:Mary Frisewide
Module:
Embed:yes
Priest
Type:priest
Church:Church of England
Diocese:Diocese of Durham
Ordination:1896 (deacon)

Stephen Richard Platt Moulsdale (18 August 1872, County Sligo – 25 October 1944, Hintlesham) was an Irish Anglican priest and academic administrator.

Life and career

The eldest son of the Revd T. H. P. Moulsdale, an Anglo-Irish cleric who was the rector of Ballysumaghan, Stephen Moulsdale was educated initially in Sligo followed by St Aidan's Theological College in Birkenhead.[1] He was ordained in 1896 and became a curate at St Chad's Church in Everton, Liverpool. Later continuing his studies at Durham University as a member of Bishop Hatfield's Hall, he was granted an MA in Divinity in 1903.[2] Moulsdale married Mary Frideswide, the daughter of Aysgarth School headmaster the Rev. C. T. Hales, in 1908. She died in 1933.

In 1903 he was appointed vice-principal of St Chad's Hostel, Hooton Pagnell, and in 1904 was appointed principal. Also in 1904, he was instrumental in founding St Chad's Hall at Durham University as a sister institution to the hostel, becoming its first principal, which he held concurrently with the hostel principalship. The hostel closed in 1916, with all teaching concentrated at the Durham institution, which in 1918 was renamed St Chad's College.

He remained principal of St Chad's College until 1937, serving concurrently as Vice-Chancellor of Durham University from 1934 to 1936.[3]

Notes and References

  1. News: The Rev. Dr. S. R. P. Moulsdale . . October 27, 1944 . 8.
  2. Web site: Durham University calendar 1903-4. Durham University Archives. 12 March 2018. en.
  3. Web site: A History of St Chad's College. St Chad's College, Durham. 19 July 2014. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140729221820/http://www.stchads.ac.uk/hist.html. 29 July 2014.