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Gordon Taylor (Royal Navy chaplain)

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Nickname(s)
  
"Bumper"

Role
  
Author

Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Name
  
Gordon Taylor

Service/branch
  
Royal Navy

Battles/wars
  
World War II

Battles and wars
  
World War II

Years of service
  
1940–1946

Died
  
June 27, 2009


Books
  
London's Navy: A Story of the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve

Gordon "Bumper" Clifford Taylor (24 October 1915 – 27 June 2009) was a Royal Navy chaplain, Anglican priest, author and clergyman, who served as a priest for more than fifty years.

Contents

Early life

Taylor was born in Wigan on 24 October 1915. He wished to become a chaplain as early as age 18, but was rejected as too young. He went to Christ's College to study geography and English. He took Holy Orders after studying at Ripon Hall, Oxford University where he rejected "liberal theology".

Church and Royal Navy service

After graduation he was ordained by Arthur Winnington-Ingram at St. Paul's Cathedral in 1938. He then became a curate at St. Stephen's Ealing. In 1940, he volunteered to become a chaplain in the Royal Navy, and was initially disappointed to be assigned to the stone frigate and former Butlins located at Skegness summer camp HMS Royal Arthur where new recruits were processed and trained in the Royal Navy. During that time, he buried several men killed by a Luftwaffe air raid. In 1941, he was posted aboard HMS Arrow which was assigned to Atlantic convoy until he was injured in a fall that damaged his scaphoid bone. After his treatment, he was assigned to South America. He also spent time at two shore assignments, once in Nairobi where he got permission to build a church by beating the commanding officer at snooker. On returning to home fleet he became the chaplain on HMS Rodney where she bombarded Cherbourg and Alderney to suppress German Army artillery which was harassing American soldiers. He was then assigned to convoy duty escorting ships into Murmansk.

Later life

Upon demobilization in 1946, Taylor became an assistant master at Eton College. In 1978 he wrote "The Sea Chaplains", which is now the standard history of Royal Navy chaplains. This was followed in 1983 by "London's Navy : a story of the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve". He died on 27 June 2009, aged 93.

References

Gordon Taylor (Royal Navy chaplain) Wikipedia