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Northcote, J. Spencer (James Spencer), 1821-1907

 Person

Biographical Note

James Spencer Northcote attended Oxford where he was influenced by John Henry Newman and E.B. Pusey of the Oxford Movement. In 1842 he married and was ordained an Anglican deacon in 1844. In 1845 his wife and three of her sisters converted to Catholicism and, after resigning his position in the Church of England, Northcote followed suit. His reasons for converting were outlined in The fourfold difficulty (1846). From 1847-1850 he lived in Rome and became close friends with G.B. De Rossi an historian of the catacombs; this was an area of lifelong study for Northcote and he published a number of archeological works and guides relating to them. After coming back to England, Northcote was the editor of the Clifton tracts and the Catholic journal The rambler. Following the death of his wife in 1853 he began studying for the priesthood and was ordained in 1855. In 1860 he was appointed vice-president of St. Mary's College, Oscott, an important Catholic public school and seminary where he stayed until he retired in 1877. He died in 1907.

Found in 1 Collection or Record:

James Spencer Northcote papers

 Collection
Abstract

Composed of the correspondence of nineteenth-century English priest James Spencer Northcote with John Henry Newman, Richard Simpson, James Burns, and Father Ambrose Rose St. John. The letters discuss the Catholic periodical The Rambler and religious matters. Also includes a notebook with Northcote's sermon drafts, as well as a few transcripts of sermons given by others.

Restrictions on access

Collection is open for research; portions of the collection are available digitally.

Dates: 1850-1880