Theologian Richard Hurrell Froude was born at Dartington, Devon, on the Feast of the Annunciation, 1803. He was the eldest child of the Rev. Robert Hurrell Froude, Rector of Dartington. His first school was at Ottery St. Mary. From there he went to Eton at the age of 13 and matriculated at Oriel College where he came under the influence of John Keble. Hurrell Froude made possible the Oxford Movement within the Anglican Church by bringing Keble and Newman together, and in its earliest stages was its driving force and inspiration. An original copy of the text is held at the University of Toronto Library and a complete electronic copy may be accessed at:
http://archive.org/details/hurrellfroudemem00guinuoft
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| PREFACE | xi |
| SOME MEMORANDA OF HIS LIFE AND OF HIS IDEALS | 1 |
| PART II | |
| SOME REPRINTED COMMENTS ON HIM AND ON HIS RELATION TO | |
| THE OXFORD MOVEMENT | 231 |
| INDEX | 411 |
Last updated: 8 Apr 2012 - Brian Randell
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