Died 6 December 1931 | ||
Books The Character of Jesus, A handbook of church, Marriage in church and state, Catholicity: Conciones Ad Clerum, The Acts of Uniformity |
Thomas Alexander Lacey (1853 - 1931), was an English Anglican Divine known as an advocate of the re-union of the Church of England with Rome.
Lacey was born in Nottingham. England on 20 December 1853. Educated at a Nottingham Grammar School, Lacey obtained a scholarship to Balliol College, University of Oxford aged seventeen. While a student, he became friends with Charles Gore and was a contemporary at Oxford with future Prime Minister H. H. Asquith. Following university, he worked first as a teacher at Wakefield Grammar School, and was ordained a deacon by the Bishop of Ripon in 1876. Two years later the Bishop raised him to the priesthood. He was made Canon of Worcester in 1918.
References
Thomas Alexander Lacey Wikipedia(Text) CC BY-SA