Joseph Mendham

Joseph Mendham (1769–1856) was an English clergyman and controversialist.

Life

He was the eldest son of Robert Mendham, a merchant in Walbrook, London, who died at Highgate, Middlesex, 7 April 1810, aged 77, leaving a widow, who died there on 11 October 1812, at the age of 78. He matriculated at St Edmund Hall, Oxford, on 27 January 1789, and graduated B.A. 1792, M.A. 1795. In 1793 he was ordained a deacon in the Church of England, and in 1794 priest.[1]

Early in 1795, Mendham accepted the curacy of Sutton Coldfield, Warwickshire. His sole preferment seems to have been the incumbency of Hill Chapel in Arden, Warwickshire, to which he was licensed on 22 August 1836. In this district of Warwickshire the rest of his life was spent, and he died at Sutton Coldfield on 1 November 1856, aged 87.[1]

Works

Mendham studied the points of controversy between Catholicism and its Protestant opponents. He wrote:

He contributed to Notes and Queries, the Protestant Journal, and Christian Observer. Articles by him in the Church of England Quarterly Review were printed separately.[1]

Mendham collected a library of controversial theology. This came to his nephew, the Rev. John Mendham, on whose death his widow, Sophia, placed the books at the disposal of Charles Hastings Collette, solicitor in Lincoln's Inn Fields, by whom a selection was made and presented to the Incorporated Law Society in Chancery Lane, London. These are described in a printed catalogue dated 1871, and in a supplement which was issued in 1874. It contained many sermons and pamphlets by him. This Mendham Collection has since 1985 been on loan to Canterbury Cathedral Library and the University of Kent.[3] In July 2012 the Law Society removed some of the most valuable books with the intention of selling them to raise funds.[4] An auction sale took place at Sotheby's in London on 5 June 2013, when 106 out of the total of 142 lots were sold at a total price of £1,180,875.[5] The Revd. Joseph Mendham bequeathed manuscripts concerned with the Council of Trent to the Bodleian Library.[6]

Family

On 15 December 1795 he married Maria, second daughter of the Rev. John Riland, rector of Sutton Coldfield (died 1822), by his wife Ann, daughter of Thomas Hudson of Huddersfield. His wife, who was born in 1772, died in 1841. Their only son, the Rev. Robert Riland Mendham, matriculated at Wadham College, Oxford, 12 November 1816, aged 18, took the degrees of B.A. 1820, M.A. 1824, and died at Sutton Coldfield 15 June 1857. Their daughter, Ann Maria Mendham, died 1872. Both were unmarried.[1]

Sources

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Courtney 1894.
  2. Richard Frederick Littledale, A Short History of the Council of Trent.
  3. "Introduction", Canterbury Cathedral Library, UK: Amp Ltd.
  4. Dispersal of the Mendham collection (press release), UK: University of Kent, 2012.
  5. "Sale results", The Mendham collection, Sotheby’s, 2013.
  6. "Mendham", Bodleian Library, UK: Oxford.

Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Courtney, William Prideaux (1894). "Mendham, Joseph". In Lee, Sidney. Dictionary of National Biography. 37. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 

External links

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