Thomas Crick
Anglican priest (1885–1970)
Thomas Crick, CB, CBE, MVO[1] (17 March 1885 – 13 November 1970) was an Anglican priest in the middle part of the 20th century.
Life
Crick was born in 1885 and educated at St Edmund's School, Canterbury and Brasenose College, Oxford.[2] Ordained in 1909 he began his career with a curacy at Wigan after which he was a Chaplain with the Royal Navy and rose through the service to become Chaplain of the Fleet with the title of Archdeacon of the Royal Navy. An Honorary Chaplain to the King, in 1943 he was appointed Dean of Rochester,[3] a post he held for fifteen years. He died on 13 November 1970. He is now the name of a school house at Kings School Rochester, in Kent. This is called Crick house.[4]
References
Church of England titles | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Arthur Deane Gilbertson | Chaplain of the Fleet 1938–1943 | Succeeded by John Kenneth Wilson |
Preceded by | Dean of Rochester 1943–1958 | Succeeded by |
- v
- t
- e
- William Guise-Tucker
- John Cawston
- John Harbord
- John Cox-Edwards
- John Berry
- Stuart Harris
- Hugh Wood
- Charles Ingles
- Robert McKew
- Walter Knight-Adkin
- Charles Peshall
- Arthur Gilbertson
- Thomas Crick
- John Wilson
- Leonard Coulshaw
- Noel Chamberlain
- Darrell Bunt
- John Armstrong
- Raymond Richardson
- Christopher Prior
- Ambrose Weekes
- Chandos Morgan
- Basil O'Ferrall
- Raymond Roberts
- Noël Jones
- Michael Henley
- Michael Bucks
- Simon Golding
- Charles Stewart
- Barry Hammett
- John Green
- Scott Brown
- Ian Wheatley
- Martyn Gough
- Andrew Hillier
- Simon Golding, Chaplain of the Fleet
- Simon Golding, Principal Anglican Chaplain
- Simon Golding, CF
- Barry Hammett, CF
- John Green, CF
- Martin Poll, Deputy CF & PAC
- Ian Wheatley, DCF & PAC
- Martyn Gough, CF
- Andrew Hillier, CF