
Samuel Wilson Warneford (1763 – 11 January 1855) was an astute and eccentric English cleric and philanthropist from an old but generally impoverished family. He married into money, as his father had done, and thereafter spent his life trying to dispose of his fortune to the benefit of religious, educational and medical causes in England and abroad. A zealot, long widowed and childless, his domestic life was frugal and he left nothing to his family.
Life
Samuel Warneford was born in 1763, possibly in the village of
Sevenhampton, near
Highworth in
Wiltshire, England. His father, an ordained minister called Francis Warneford, came from a long-established but often penurious landowning family whose family seat was
Warneford Place, in Sevenhampton, where they owned all of the land. The family's finances had been much improved when Francis married his second wife, Catherine, the daughter of a wealthy London-based drug merchant; after her death, he married Samuel's mother, also called Catherine. Samuel was the younger of two sons and also had at least two sisters, who never married and lived with him in adult life.
From 1779, Warneford attended
University College, Oxford, from where he was awarded a BA degree in 1783 and an MA in 1786. He was ordained in 1787 and became
curate
A curate () is a person who is invested with the ''care'' or ''cure'' (''cura'') ''of souls'' of a parish. In this sense, "curate" means a parish priest; but in English-speaking countries the term ''curate'' is commonly used to describe clergy w ...
at what is now called
Brize Norton and was then known as Norton Broyne, supplementing his qualifications with the degree of
BCL in 1790.
He was
vicar at
Bures St. Mary
Bures St Mary is a civil parish in the Babergh district of the English county of Suffolk. In 2005 it had a population of 940, reducing to 918 at the 2011 Census. The parish covers the eastern part of the village of Bures, the western part be ...
in
Suffolk
Suffolk () is a ceremonial county of England in East Anglia. It borders Norfolk to the north, Cambridgeshire to the west and Essex to the south; the North Sea lies to the east. The county town is Ipswich; other important towns include Lowes ...
from 1795 to 1798.
In September 1796, like his father, Samuel married into money: his wife, Margaret, was a daughter of
Edward Loveden Loveden
Edward Loveden Loveden (ca. 1749/1751–1822) was an English Member of Parliament (MP), sometimes described as a Whig but often not voting with that party.
Life
The date of birth of Edward Loveden Loveden, whose birthname was Edward Loved ...
, a cheese merchant and
Member of Parliament. Margaret's father objected to the arrangement but its progression brought together the fortunes of two families and was then further enhanced by a legacy of £34,000 left to his sickly wife by her grandfather.
She died, insane and childless, three years after the marriage. Thereafter, Warneford developed a reputation for eccentricity and for a parsimonious domestic lifestyle, as well as for his philanthropy.
Warneford's views on religious matters were zealous, fierce even, and he had a dislike for those who believed differently. His friend and biographer, Thomas Vaughan, noted that he saw "the subtle designs of the Jesuits, and the insidious intrusion of malignant dissenters" as the most significant challenge to his philanthropic endeavours. He bought the
advowsons of
Lydiard Millicent, in Wiltshire, and
Bourton-on-the-Hill, in
Gloucestershire, in 1809 and 1810, respectively. It was also in 1810 that he was awarded a
DCL
DCL or may refer to:
* 650 in Roman numerals, see 650 (disambiguation)
Computers
* Data Center Linux, see Open Source Development Labs
* Data Control Language, a subset of SQL
* Dialog Control Language, a language and interpreter within AutoC ...
degree. He retained the
rectorship of Lydiard Millicent until his death in 1855, although he sold the advowson to
Pembroke College, Oxford
Pembroke College, a constituent college of the University of Oxford, is located at Pembroke Square, Oxford. The college was founded in 1624 by King James I of England, using in part the endowment of merchant Thomas Tesdale, and was named after ...
in 1828. In additional to these clerical interests, he was appointed an honorary
canon of
Gloucester Cathedral
Gloucester Cathedral, formally the Cathedral Church of St Peter and the Holy and Indivisible Trinity, in Gloucester, England, stands in the north of the city near the River Severn. It originated with the establishment of a minster dedicated to S ...
in 1844.
Described as shy, puny and delicate as a child, Warneford was also considered reclusive as an adult, despite having to undertake considerable amounts of travel to oversee his benefactions. His dress was generally outmoded, his house unkempt, and the horses that he relied upon to draw his carriage for his many miles of travel were bought when they were old and past their best. Always attentive to his legacy, he left many codicils to his will, which omitted his family just as he had refused them charity during his lifetime.
He was not unaware of his nature, describing himself on one occasion as "a miser - a calculating miser".
Warneford died on 11 January 1855 at his rectory in Bourton, aged 92, and was buried in the church there.
He may have had regrets as he lay dying, saying that "I should have been kinder, I should have been more considerate and understanding."
Philanthropy
W. M. Priest notes that "It seems that
arneforddid not want the huge fortune he acquired and deliberately spent his life getting rid of it."
He was astute as well as rich, spreading his philanthropy wide across the fields of religion, education and healthcare.
But he considered his donation of money, or the refusal of it, to be a carrot-and-stick affair, whereby worthy projects were rewarded and the unworthy punished. According to historian William Whyte he could be "tyrannical" in his attempts to control the use of his money and his donations were often made incrementally so that he could monitor progress and, in particular, remedy perceived problems.
He favoured the practical over the ostentatious and spread his beneficence not only in his own country but also to religious causes in places such as Africa, Australia, New Zealand and Nova Scotia.
Locally, Warneford spent £1,000 refitting his own church in Bourton and also a similar sum on that of the church at the nearby
Moreton-in-Marsh. There and throughout the rest of the Gloucester diocese, he financed the building of schools and the provision of medical aid, while in Bourton he also provided facilities for older people.
On the other hand, he fell out with his parishioners at Lydiard Millicent when they objected to his attempts to increase the
tithe and the church there fell into disrepair as he refused to spend money on it despite it being his responsibility to do so.
Other fundings with religious connections included donations to the
Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, the
Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge and the
Corporation for the Sons of the Clergy which, combined with bequests at his death, amounted to £200,000. He also donated the land for the
Clergy Orphan School
Clergy Support Trust is a charity which was formerly (between 2012 and 2019) known as Sons & Friends of the Clergy. The full official name of the charity is Governors of the Charity for Relief of the Poor Widows and Children of Clergymen. The pres ...
, near
Canterbury, and again remembered it in his will, in this case with a £13,000 legacy.
As well as being a governor of
Oxford's
Radcliffe Infirmary
The Radcliffe Infirmary was a hospital in central north Oxford, England, located at the southern end of Woodstock Road on the western side, backing onto Walton Street.
History
The initial proposals to build a hospital in Oxford were put forw ...
, he sat on committees there and gave money and property together worth over £70,000 for the development of a new asylum for lunatics.
His considerable and detailed interest in that project may have been spurred by his wife's insanity: he had rejected suggestions that she should be hospitalised, preferring to nurse her at home after being appalled during his inspections of several possible institutes.
Originally known as the Radcliffe Asylum, his kickstarting of the project from 1831, when he became impatient that things had been dragging since 1812, resulted in the institution later bearing the name
Warneford Lunatic Asylum
The Warneford Hospital is a hospital providing mental health services at Headington in east Oxford, England. It is managed by the Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust.
History
The hospital opened as the ''Oxford Lunatic Asylum'' in July 1826. I ...
from 1843.
Another significant involvement in healthcare provision was his £3,000 contribution towards the building of
Warneford, Leamington, and South Warwickshire Hospital, which represented 75 per cent of the cost. Despite some later misgivings about what he considered to be financial extravagance at the hospital, which was then mainly a
hydrotherapy facility,
he bequeathed £10,000 to it on his death.
At
King's College, London he provided money for medical scholarships and also for prizes intended to encourage religious development among its students.
The concern for the religious attentions of medical students was a common theme, for Warneford believed them to be an ungodly lot, saying on one occasion that "What is said about the absorbing nature of a medical student's pursuits is but too true, and it is one of the evils which most requires remedy, it is this which narrows their minds and makes them bigots to low infidel views".
Although certainly eccentric in many ways, his fears did have some basis in accepted wisdom because among the radical thinkers of the era were many who possessed a medical background.
From 1838, he followed a similar course to that adopted at King's in his dealings with the Birmingham Royal Medical School, later known as
Queen's College, Birmingham, where his efforts were instrumental in bringing higher education to the city. His gifts to the value of £25,000 provided for chaplaincies as well as scholarships, a professorial chair in pastoral theology and new buildings.
His involvement ensured that Queen's was an exclusively
Anglican
Anglicanism is a Western Christian tradition that has developed from the practices, liturgy, and identity of the Church of England following the English Reformation, in the context of the Protestant Reformation in Europe. It is one of th ...
institution and as much a
seminary as a medical school
but his interest in the project was somewhat neglected at his death because of his concern that it had not developed according to his expectations.
Of those expectations he noted "the inculcation of sound religious principles has been, and is, the basis of my donations either to your Hospital or your College ... All other objects are to me of secondary consideration."
Officers at both King's and Queen's sometimes frustrated him with their concerns regarding his zealotry.
Whyte says that Warneford – in life "a grasping, avaricious, bigoted reactionary" – and
John Owens – "a parsimonious, work-obsessed, easily offended bachelor, who gave little to charity in his lifetime" and whose legacy was the basis for
Owens College in
Manchester – were "disagreeable men, with deep pockets and few friends". The two institutions were very different but in the characters of their benefactors lie fundamental similarities often found in history, that philanthropy is not necessarily selfless and that "the good are not always very nice".
References
Notes
Citations
Further reading
*
External links
Archival resources for Warneford
{{DEFAULTSORT:Warneford, Samuel Wilson
1763 births
1855 deaths
Alumni of University College, Oxford
English philanthropists
People from Highworth
18th-century English Anglican priests
19th-century English Anglican priests
18th-century philanthropists
19th-century British philanthropists