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词条 Avison Scott
释义

  1. Family

     Notable relatives  Own immediate relatives 

  2. Education

  3. Ecclesiastical career

  4. References

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2016}}{{Infobox Christian leader
| honorific-prefix = {{pre-nominal styles|Very Rev}}
| name = Avison Terry Scott
| title = Archdeacon of Tonbridge
| image =
| imagesize =
| caption =
| church = Church of England
| diocese = Diocese of Canterbury
| term = 1906–1925
| predecessor = Inaugural incumbent
| successor = Leonard Savill
| other_post = Vicar of Tonbridge Wells
1886–1925
| ordination = 1871 (deacon)
1872 (priest)
| consecration =
| consecrated_by =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1848|7|18|df=yes}}
| birth_place = Cambridge, England, England
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1925|6|18|1848|7|18|df=yes}}
| death_place = Marylebone, London, England
| religion = Anglican
| residence = Tunbridge Wells
| parents = John Scott and Charlotte Anne, née Terry
| spouse = Dora née Tillard
| children = 5s; 2d
| alma_mater = Trinity College, Cambridge
}}Reverend Avison Terry Scott (18 July 1848 – 18 June 1925) was an English first-class cricketer active 1867–71 who played for Cambridge Town Club (aka Cambridgeshire) and Cambridge University. He was born in Cambridge and died in Marylebone.[1] He later became an Anglican priest.[2]

Family

Notable relatives

Scott was a descendant of the commentator Thomas Scott; great nephew of Sir George Gilbert Scott; nephew of George Gilbert Scott Jr.; uncle of Elliot Dowell Tillard; cousin of Giles Gilbert Scott; and father of George Arbuthnot Scott.[3]

Own immediate relatives

Scott was the son of Canon John Scott, Vicar of Wisbech.[4] In 1874 he married Dora (Dorothea Sarah), daughter of The Rev. Richard Tillard, Rector of Blakeney, Norfolk: as well as their middle child, the cricketer George they had three older (John Wilfrid; Amy Florence; andCharles Tillard) and three younger children

(Arthur Avison; Walter Leonard; Anna Dorothea).

Education

Scott was educated at Brighton College and Trinity College, Cambridge.[5]

Ecclesiastical career

After serving curacies at Swaffham and Wimbledon he became the incumbent at Christ Church, Bootle in 1879. In 1886, he was appointed Vicar of St James, Tunbridge Wells. In 1895 he additionally took on the responsibility of chaplain to the Tonbridge Union Workhouse [6] In 1906 the Bishop of Rochester obtained an Order in Council to create an Archdeaconry of Tonbridge and nominated Scott to be the first incumbent.[7]

References

1. ^www.Cricinfo
2. ^St James, Tunbridge Wells
3. ^thePeerage.com
4. ^‘SCOTT, Ven. Avison Terry’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014 accessed 7 Nov 2016
5. ^John Venn, John Archibald Venn, Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, Part 2 vol. 5 p. 441 (Cambridge, CUP, 1953)
6. ^National Archives
7. ^Archdeacon Scott The Times (London, England), Friday, Jun 19, 1925; pg. 18; Issue 43992
{{Trinity College, Cambridge}}{{Cambridge University Cricket Club}}{{Archdeacons of Tonbridge}}{{portal bar|Anglicanism|Cricket|University of Cambridge}}{{authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Scott, Avison}}{{UK-reli-bio-stub}}{{england-cricket-bio-1840s-stub}}

11 : 1848 births|1925 deaths|People educated at Brighton College|People from Marylebone|Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge|19th-century English Anglican priests|20th-century English Anglican priests|Archdeacons of Tonbridge|English cricketers|Cambridge Town Club cricketers|Cambridge University cricketers

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