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{{Short description|Anglican religious institution in Oxford, UK}} {{Use British English|date=January 2022}} {{Use dmy dates|date=January 2022}} {{Infobox residential college | name = Pusey House | university =<!--please leave blank; this establishment is not a permanent private hall or constituent college of Oxford University--> | image = Richard_Blackwell_Quadrangle_2025.jpg | shield = | scarf = {{scarf|{{cells|3|#001}}{{cell|#FF0}}{{cells|2|#F00}}{{cell|#FF0}}{{cells|3|#001}}{{cell|#FF0}}{{cells|2|#F00}}{{cell|#FF0}}{{cells|3|#001}}}} | location = [[St Giles', Oxford]], OX1 3LZ | motto = ''Deus Scientiarum Dominus''<br />"The Lord is a God of Knowledge" | established = {{Start date and age|1884}} | named_for = [[Edward Bouverie Pusey]] | architect = [[Temple Moore]] | principal = George Westhaver | president = | chief_justice = | provost = | deputy_provost = | officer = | administrator = | dean = | benefactor = | HoCo_chair = | residents = <!-- or | membership = --> | undergraduates = | postgraduates = | senior_tutor = | res_tutors = | chapel = | mascot = | newspaper = | charities = | events = | called = | fellows = | endowment = | website = | student_association = | jcr_label = | JCR = | mcr_label = | MCR= | scr_label = | SCR= | boat_club= | coordinates = {{coord|51.7567|-1.2604|region:GB|display=inline,title}} | location_map = Oxford (central) | map_size = | embedded = http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/ | chaplain = Mark Stafford | founders=[[Henry Parry Liddon]]<br />[[Charles Wood, 2nd Viscount Halifax]]<br />[[Frederick Lygon, 6th Earl Beauchamp]] }} [[File:St John the Baptist - Stained Glass Window by Ninian Comper.jpg|thumb|[[John the Baptist|St John the Baptist]] shown in [[Ninian Comper|Ninian Comper's]] east window]] '''Pusey House''' ({{IPAc-en|Λ|p|j|uΛ|z|i}}) is an [[Anglican]] [[religious institution]] and [[charitable incorporated organisation]] located on [[St Giles', Oxford]], United Kingdom, immediately to the south of [[Pusey Street]]. It is firmly rooted in the [[Anglo-Catholic]] [[Book of Common Prayer|Prayer Book]] tradition of the [[Church of England]] and was founded in 1884 in memory of [[Edward Bouverie Pusey]], Regius Professor of [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] at [[Oxford University]] and one of the leaders of the [[Oxford Movement]]. The house was established as a "House of Piety of Learning" with a library and chapel, both of which remain open and in use today. One of the original intentions of Pusey House was to house Pusey's collection of books<ref name="Lepine">{{cite journal |last1=Lepine |first1=Ayla |title=Modern Gothic and the House of God: Revivalism and Monasticism in Two Twentieth-Century Anglican Chapels |journal=Visual Resources |date=2016 |volume=32 |issue=1β2 |pages=76β101|doi=10.1080/01973762.2016.1132146 |s2cid=193003965 }}</ref> and, since its foundation, the house has come to possess many artifacts relating to Pusey and the Oxford Movement, with the house's library and Archive holding one of the country's most significant collections of material pertaining to Anglo-Catholicism.<ref name="Pusey House Library Website">{{cite web |url=http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/library.html |title=Pusey House Library & Archive |website=www.puseyhouse.org.uk |access-date=April 9, 2022}}</ref> The house holds daily services in its chapel, as well as regular lectures and events. Pusey House is closely associated with Oxford University, especially [[St Cross College, Oxford|St Cross College]] which moved onto the Pusey House site in 1981, but is not itself a [[permanent private hall]] or [[Colleges of the University of Oxford|constituent college]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/|title=Home|website=www.puseyhouse.org.uk |accessdate=16 September 2022}}</ref> ==History== '''Pusey Memorial House'''<!--the original name of the establishment--><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.oxfordhistory.org.uk/stgiles/tour/west/60_61_pusey_house.html|title=Pusey House, St Giles, Oxford|website=www.oxfordhistory.org.uk|language=en|access-date=November 2, 2023}}</ref> was opened on 9 October 1884<ref>Pall Mall Gazette, Thursday 18 September 1884, p.10</ref> as a memorial to [[Edward Bouverie Pusey]], Regius Professor of [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] at [[Oxford University]], a [[Canon (priest)|canon]] of [[Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford|Christ Church Cathedral]] and for 40 years a leading figure in the [[Oxford Movement]], a movement of the mid-19th century which sought to bring the [[Church of England]] to a deeper understanding of its witness as part of the universal ("[[Catholicity|Catholic]]") church.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/what-is-pusey-house.html|title=What is Pusey House?|website=www.puseyhouse.org.uk|language=en|access-date=2019-07-15|archive-date=3 August 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220803193223/http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/what-is-pusey-house.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> It was also intended to continue the work of Pusey in restoring the Church of England's Catholic life and witness.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://gdc.galegroup.com/gdc/artemis/NewspapersDetailsPage/NewspapersDetailsWindow?disableHighlighting=false&displayGroupName=DVI-Newspapers&docIndex=3&prodId=TTDA&mode=view&limiter=DA+118800101+-+120131231&display-query=OQE+Pusey+House&contentModules=&action=e&sortBy=&windowstate=normal&currPage=1&dviSelectedPage=&scanId=&query=OQE+Pusey+House&search_within_results=&p=TTDA&catId=&displayGroups=&documentId=GALE%7CCS50644810&activityType=BasicSearch&failOverType=&commentary=&source=Bookmark&u=oxford&jsid=172864ab5f98be5cc60678ec0abe335b|title=The Times Digital Archive β Document|website=gdc.galegroup.com|access-date=2019-07-16}}</ref> It was established with a fund of Β£50,000 to provide a building for Pusey's library, purchase it and create an endowment so that two or more clergy could take charge of it and promote religious life in the university.<ref>''Alden's Oxford Guide'', Oxford: Alden & Co., 1958; p. 101</ref><ref>[[Henry Parry Liddon]] described its purpose thus: "A home of sacred learning and rallying-point for Christian faith ... It will form a centre of moral and intellectual and spiritual enthusiasm, in which all that is solid in inquiry and learning, and all that is lofty and aspiring in moral effort shall find encouragement under the consecrating shadow of a great name."--quoted in Alden (1958)</ref> The first principal was [[Charles Gore]], who founded the [[Community of the Resurrection]] at the house in 1892. The Community moved to Mirfield (where it remains) when Gore resigned as Principal in 1897.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|title=Piety and learning : the principals of Pusey House 1884-2002|last=Orford, Barry A. Davage, William.|date=2002|publisher=Pusey House|oclc=51228277}}</ref> The house flourished in the following years and came to experiment with forms of quasi-monastic life. [[Vincent Coles|Vincent Stuckey Stratton Coles]], principal from 1897 to 1909, later recorded that "for a moment it seemed as if the Pusey House was trying to become a monastery. Silence was observed at dinner on Fridays. Great regularity of attendance at the chapel offices, and regulations as to the times of retirement and rising, began to be practised."<ref name="Coles Papers">{{cite book |last1=Coles |first1=Vincent Stuckey Stratton |title=V.S.S. Coles: Papers, Letters, Hymns & Verses, with a Memoir |date=1930 |location=London |pages=208β209}}</ref> Coles had been the first priest librarian along with [[Frank Edward Brightman|F. E. Brightman]] when Gore was principal. [[Edward King (bishop of Lincoln)|Edward King, Bishop of Lincoln]], famously quipped that "Brightman would dust the books, Gore would read them, and Coles would talk about them."<ref name="What is Pusey House?">{{cite web |url=http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/what-is-pusey-house.html |title=What is the Pusey House |website=www.puseyhouse.org.uk |access-date=April 9, 2022 |archive-date=3 August 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220803193223/http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/what-is-pusey-house.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> During the principalship of [[Darwell Stone]], a new building was commissioned which was eventually designed by [[Temple Moore]], a leading Anglo-Catholic architect of his time.<ref name="Architecture of Temple Moore">{{cite book |last1=Brandwood |first1=Geoff |title=The Architecture of Temple Moore |date=2019 |publisher=Shaun Tyas}}</ref> The house continued its work as the centre of Anglo-Catholicism in Oxford in the new buildings, attracting undergraduates including [[John Betjeman]] and [[Harold Macmillan]].<ref name=":1"/> Since 1981, a portion of the Pusey House site has been occupied by [[St Cross College, Oxford|St Cross College]]<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.stx.ox.ac.uk/about-st-cross/college-history/move-st-giles |title=The move to St Giles |date=2012-08-01 |website=St Cross College |language=en |access-date=2019-07-15 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190715163420/https://www.stx.ox.ac.uk/about-st-cross/college-history/move-st-giles |archive-date=2019-07-15 }}</ref> on a [[999-year lease]].{{Citation needed|date=October 2022}} ==Buildings== From 1884 until 1912, Pusey House occupied two townhouses on [[St Giles', Oxford|St Giles']] on the site of the current building. Following a 1903 benefaction of Β£70,000 from a Leeds solicitor, John Cudworth, and with a growing ministry to the university, Pusey House was able to consider rebuilding.<ref name=":2">{{Cite web |last=Spain |first=Harry |date=2022 |title=Temple Moore at Pusey House (Recollection Lecture) |website=[[YouTube]] |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d5nHXCYKi0Y}}</ref> In 1910, the governors took advantage of the falling in of a lease at a neighbouring townhouse which was subsequently bought and demolished to make way for the new buildings.[[File:Pusey House Chapel - East end - geograph.org.uk - 2181808.jpg|left|thumb|328x328px|The Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament with [[Ninian Comper|Ninian Comper's]] baldacchino and stained glass ]]The principal at the time, [[Darwell Stone]], requested that the new building should include a chapel "of good and simple architecture to hold about 200 and a side chapel to hold about thirty" alongside lecture rooms, domestic ranges, a library, and museum.<ref name=":2" /> Four architects were approached to submit designs: [[Harold Brakspear]], [[Walter Tapper]], [[Giles Gilbert Scott]], and [[Temple Moore]].<ref name="Lepine" /> After inspecting the four proposals the building committee chose Moore's designs, formally appointing him as architect in October 1911.<ref name=":2" /> Moore designed a large Gothic building around a quadrangle, its centrepiece being the two vaulted chapels separated by a stone [[pulpitum]] which he based on those found in 'medieval [[Franciscans|Franciscan]] priories'.<ref name=":2" /> The chapel and part of the library were complete by 1914, and most of the remaining portions of the building were finished in 1918.<ref name="Lepine" /> The south range of the quadrangle remained unexecuted at the time of Moore's death in 1920, and was only finished in 1925 to sympathetic designs by John Coleridge.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |first=Nikolaus |last=Pevsner |title=Oxfordshire |date=2002 |publisher=Yale University Press |isbn=0300096399 |pages=315β316 |oclc=896000965}}</ref> The smaller Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament was reordered between 1935 and 1939 by Sir [[Ninian Comper]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Symondson |first=Anthony |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/74118510 |title=Sir Ninian Comper : an introduction to his life and work with complete gazetteer |date=2006 |publisher=Spire Books |others=Ninian Comper, Ecclesiological Society |isbn=1-904965-11-3 |location=Reading |oclc=74118510}}</ref> Comper's work in the chapel included the construction of a gilded baldacchino surmounted by the resurrected Christ and attendant angels, and the stained glass in the east window. In the east window, Comper depicted a Tree of Jesse commemorating Pusey. The window contains figures of [[Old Testament]] prophets and [[Church Fathers]] surrounding [[Christ in Majesty]] and the [[Madonna (art)|Virgin and Child]]. The figure of Pusey can be seen, kneeling at the base of the second light from the right. Comper also designed vestments for Pusey House, and specially designed his "strawberry"<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wattsandco.com/products/comper-strawberry-white-gold-blue|title=Comper Strawberry - White/Gold/Blue|website=www.wattsandco.com|accessdate=16 September 2022}}</ref> pattern for the chapel. ==Library == The library is a theological and historical collection of 75,000 volumes which includes Pusey's library and a large collection of other theological and historical volumes. Pusey's own books, bought after his death, originally formed the heart of Pusey House Library. Since then, by gift and purchase, the library has grown into a collection which has been recognised by the National Archives as a leading specialist library not only in Oxford but in the United Kingdom. In addition to its primary source material and books on the [[Anglo-Catholic Movement]] (Tractarian and Oxford movements), the library also has collections of material for the study of patristics, church history, liturgy, doctrine, monasticism and Anglican Catholic organisations.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/printed-books.html|title=Printed Books|website=www.puseyhouse.org.uk|language=en|access-date=2019-07-15|archive-date=15 August 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190815174410/http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/printed-books.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> The archive contains extensive material on the Tractarians and the Oxford Movement: the records of a number of Anglo-Catholic societies; communities of monks and nuns; letters and papers of notable Anglicans, as well as the archive of Pusey himself.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/archive.html|title=Archive|website=www.puseyhouse.org.uk|language=en|access-date=2019-07-15|archive-date=20 December 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161220085449/http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/archive.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> The manuscripts include papers of many notable figures, organisations and societies connected with the Oxford Movement in the 19th and 20th centuries. The most significant holdings are those of [[Edward Bouverie Pusey|E. B. Pusey]], [[Henry Liddon|H. P. Liddon]], and [[Sidney Leslie Ollard|S. L. Ollard]], but there are also papers relating to other notable people such as [[William Ewart Gladstone]], [[John Henry Newman]], Frederic Hood, [[F. L. Cross]], and [[John Keble]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://puseyarchives.blogspot.com/|title=Pusey House Archive Catalogue|language=en-GB|access-date=2019-07-15}}</ref> ==Worship== [[File:Pusey_House_High_Mass.jpg|thumb|High Mass in the chapel]] Worship in the Chapel of the Resurrection is in accordance with the Anglo-Catholic [[Churchmanship|tradition]] in the Church of England and is open to all, especially to members of the university.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/the-house.html|title=The House|website=www.puseyhouse.org.uk|language=en|access-date=2019-07-16|archive-date=26 July 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190726055510/http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/the-house.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> Alongside its reputation for dignified and traditional liturgy, Pusey House is also recognised for its musical tradition, most visible at the Solemn Mass on Sundays and solemnities.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/the-music.html|title=THE MUSIC|website=www.puseyhouse.org.uk|language=en|access-date=2019-07-16|archive-date=19 July 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190719194435/http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/the-music.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> ===Services and observances=== * [[Compline]] each Tuesday evening during full term * [[Low Mass]] daily during full term, with a BCP celebration on Fridays * [[Morning Prayer (Anglican)|Morning Prayer]] and [[Evening Prayer (Anglican)|Evening Prayer]], daily during full term * [[Solemn Mass|Solemn High Mass]] every Sunday and on major festivals during full term with the Ordinary of the Mass sung by the choir ==Music== The Choir of Pusey House is formed of eight choral scholars, largely students who are or recently have been members of college chapel choirs from across the [[University of Oxford|University]]. The choir is responsible for singing at term-time Sundays (0-9th week), some weekday feasts, and other out of term services such as occasional [[evensong|evensongs]], [[carol service|carol services]] and services through [[Holy Week]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Music at Pusey House |url=https://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/music |website=Pusey House |access-date=19 March 2024}}</ref> Most Sundays, the choir will sing a polyphonic mass setting (which in Lent and Advent is normally replaced with plainsong) and an anthem, plainsong propers as well as support the hymns and congregationally sung [[Gloria in excelsis Deo|Gloria]] and [[Nicene Creed|Creed]]. The choir's repertoire is made up of predominantly [[Gregorian chant|chant]], Renaissance [[polyphony]], such as that by [[William Byrd|Byrd]], [[Thomas Tallis|Tallis]] and [[Orlando di Lasso|Lassus]], as well as later Romantic and Modern composers of [[anglican church music|English church music]], [[Charles Villiers Stanford|Stanford]], [[Edward Bairstow|Bairstow]], and [[Peter Tranchell]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Music Lists |url=https://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/music-lists-archive |website=Pusey House |access-date=19 March 2024}}</ref> Occasionally, the choir performs works by continental 19th and 20th century composers such as [[Louis Vierne|Vierne]] and [[Maurice DuruflΓ©|DuruflΓ©]]. Pusey House commissioned a new mass setting for its 125th anniversary celebrations from the composer [[Alexander Campkin]]. Another House commission is a setting of the [[Psalm 118#Uses|HΓ¦c Dies]] for [[Easter Day]] by [[Sydney Watson]].<ref>{{cite web |title=PASSIONTIDE HOLY WEEK EASTER 2024 |url=https://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/_files/ugd/0711b7_8b0c37a2cf9d4ad394202bc57f02c702.pdf |website=Pusey House |access-date=19 March 2024}}</ref> In the past, the choir has recorded several CDs. Service music in the vacation is provided by a cantor or by musicians from the congregation often with support from members of the regular choir. One musical highlight of the year is the choral [[Eucharist|Communion]] on the feast of [[King Charles the Martyr|Charles, King and Martyr]] according to the [[Book of Common Prayer (1662)|1662 Book of Common Prayer]]. This service normally features Tudor and Jacobean and Early English [[Baroque |Baroque music]] works, and choral responses to the [[Ten Commandments|Commandments]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Commemoration of Charles King and Martyr at Pusey House |url=https://www.pbs.org.uk/event/commemoration-of-charles-king-and-martyr-2/ |website=The Prayer Book Society |access-date=19 March 2024}}</ref> The choir takes part in the "Pusey Goes to London" trips that take place every few years, often in [[All Saints, Margaret Street]]. This normally involves both current and former choir members.<ref>{{cite web |title=Weekly Email β Epiphany |url=https://asms.uk/about/news/weekly-email-epiphany/ |website=All Saints, Margaret Street |access-date=19 March 2024}}</ref> The House owns an [[Edwardian era|Edwardian]] [[pipe organ|organ]] originally built by [[J. W. Walker & Sons Ltd|J.W. Walker]] for St. Paul's, Slough in 1908. It was moved to the House in 2014 by [[Peter Collins (organ builder)|Peter Collins]].<ref>{{cite web |title=The Organ |url=https://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/organ |website=Pusey House |access-date=19 March 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Oxfordshire, Oxford, Pusey House Chapel, [F00138] |url=https://npor.org.uk/survey/F00138 |website=National Pipe Organ Register |access-date=19 March 2024}}</ref> The House previously had an instrument by Rest Cartwright & Son of two manuals and pedals that has since been removed.<ref>{{cite web |title=Oxfordshire, Oxford, Pusey House Chapel, [N07884] |url=https://npor.org.uk/survey/N07884 |website=National Pipe Organ Register |access-date=19 March 2024}}</ref> The current Master of Music is Ed Gaut.<ref>{{cite web |title=About and Who's Who |url=https://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/about |website=Puse House |access-date=19 March 2024}}</ref> Pusey House regularly hosts concerts and rehearsals for several Oxford-based and student ensembles and choirs.<ref>{{cite web |title=2024-2023 Season |url=https://www.vox-choir-oxford.co.uk/concerts |website=vOx Chamber Choir |access-date=19 March 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Past Concerts |url=https://www.schola-cantorum.net/past-concerts.html |website=Schola Cantorum or Oxford |access-date=19 March 2024}}</ref> ==Principals== *1884β1893: [[Charles Gore]] *1893β1897: [[Robert Lawrence Ottley]] *1897β1909: Vincent Stuckey Stratton Coles *1909β1934: [[Darwell Stone]] *1934β1951: [[Archibald Frederic Hood]] *1951β1970: Francis Hugh Maycock<ref>"A Field Guide to the English Clergy' Butler-Gallie, F pp56-59: London, Oneworld Publications, 2018 {{ISBN|9781786074416}}</ref> *1970: Barry Marshall (died before installation) *1970β1981: [[Cheslyn Jones|Cheslyn Peter Montague Jones]] *1982β2002: Philip Ursell *2003β2013: [[Jonathan Baker (bishop)|Jonathan Baker]] *2013βpresent: George Westhaver<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/the-principals.html |title=The Principals |publisher=Pusey House |access-date=2015-09-19 |archive-date=1 March 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170301180404/http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/the-principals.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> ==Priest Librarians== The office of priest librarian dates from the foundation of the house in 1884; the following is a complete list of those who have served in the role, taken from a 140th Anniversary publication, printed by Pusey House:[[File:Pusey House Library.jpg|thumb|Upper Library, Pusey House]] *1884β1897 [[Vincent Coles| Vincent Stuckey Stratton Coles]] *1895β1903 [[Frank Edward Brightman| F. E. Brightman]]* *1895-1908 Ernest Brownlow Layward *1895β1908 Henry Falconer Barclay Mackay *1897-1921 John Carter *1903β1909 [[Darwell Stone]]* *1908-1919 George Lewis Albert Way *1908-1917 Walter Julius Carey *1910-1922 George Harold Fendick *1919-1921 Leonard Whitcombe *1920-1922 Ralph Shakespeare Eves *1921β1924 [[Mark Carpenter-Garnier]] *1922-1934 [[Archibald Frederic Hood| Frederic Hood]] *1922β1923 [[Maurice Child]] *1922-1933 Miles Pearl Sargant *1927β1944 [[F. L. Cross]]* *1929β1937 [[Humphry Beevor]] *1935-1952 Thomas Maynard Parker* *1937-1941 Harold Kent White *1941β1946 [[Eric Kemp]]* *1944-1945 Henry St John Tomlinson Evans *1946-1952 Francis John Michael Dean *1946-1952 Rees William Hippsley Phillips *1952β1956 [[Cheslyn Jones]]* *1952-1955 Philip Curtis *1954-1960 John Macdonald *1957β1961 Robert Mason Catling* *1956-1959 Gilbert Denham Bayley-Jones *1960β1969 [[Donald Allchin]] *1961β1965 [[Rodney Hunter]]<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://gdc.galegroup.com/gdc/artemis/NewspapersDetailsPage/NewspapersDetailsWindow?disableHighlighting=false&displayGroupName=DVI-Newspapers&docIndex=16&prodId=TTDA&mode=view&limiter=DA+118800101+-+120131231&display-query=OQE+Pusey+House&contentModules=&action=e&sortBy=publication-date-sort%2Cdescending&windowstate=normal&currPage=1&dviSelectedPage=&scanId=&query=OQE+Pusey+House&search_within_results=&p=TTDA&catId=&displayGroups=&documentId=GALE%7CIF0502869413&activityType=BasicSearch&failOverType=&commentary=&source=Bookmark&u=oxford&jsid=c395690fb0c0007dc19f9079663424c8|title=The Times Digital Archive β Document|website=gdc.galegroup.com|access-date=2019-07-16}}</ref> *1965-1968 David Meeson Morris *1967-1972 James Dugard Makepeace *1968β1971 & 1976-1978 Peter Cobb<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.churchtimes.co.uk/articles/2010/27-august/gazette/obituary-canon-peter-george-cobb|title=OBITUARY: CANON PETER GEORGE COBB|website=churchtimes.co.uk|access-date=2019-07-16}}</ref> *1971-1976 Kenneth William Noakes *1978-1980 David Charles Gay *1980-1982 Wayne Hankey *1980-1982 Robert Brian MacCarthy *1980-1985 William John Muir Oddie *1983β1994 Harry Reynold Smythe<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.churchtimes.co.uk/articles/2005/19-august/gazette/the-revd-dr-harry-reynolds-smythe|title=THE REVD DR HARRY REYNOLDS SMYTHE|website=churchtimes.co.uk|access-date=2019-07-16}}</ref><ref name=":1" /> *1987-1989 David Vernon Williams *1987-1989 Donald Stuart Dunnan *1987-1991 [[John Bauerschmidt| John Stuart Bauerschmidt]] *1991-1994 Michael Richard Knight *1993-1998 Kenneth Edward McNab *1994β2011 William Ernest Peter Davage *1998-1998 Lawrence Nelson Crub *1999-2001 Peter John Groves *2001β2014 Barry Orford Those marked with an asterisk acted as library custodian. == Notable people == <!---β¦β¦β¦ Please keep the list in alphabetical order by LAST NAME β¦β¦β¦---> {{div col}} *[[Donald Allchin]] *[[Jonathan Baker (bishop)|Jonathan Baker]] *[[Humphry Beevor|Humphrey Beevor]] *[[John Betjeman]] *[[Frank Edward Brightman]] *[[Walter Carey]] *[[Mark Carpenter-Garnier]] *[[Maurice Child]] *[[F. L. Cross]] *[[Percy Dearmer]] *[[Tom Driberg]] *[[Austin Farrer]] *[[Charles Gore]] *[[Archibald Frederic Hood]] *[[Rodney Hunter]] *[[John Toshimichi Imai]] *[[Cheslyn Jones]] *[[Eric Kemp]] *[[Margaret Heather Laird]] *[[C. S. Lewis]] *[[Henry Liddon|Henry Parry Liddon]] *[[Frederick Lygon, 6th Earl Beauchamp]] *[[Charles Abdy Marcon]] *[[Robert MacCarthy]] *[[Harold Macmillan]] *[[Robert Lawrence Ottley]] *[[Dorothy L. Sayers]] *[[Darwell Stone]] *[[J. R. R. Tolkien]] *[[Cuthbert Turner]] *[[Philip Waggett]] *[[Evelyn Waugh]] *[[David Williams (crime writer)|David Williams]] *[[Charles Wood, 2nd Viscount Halifax]] {{div col end}} ==Gallery== <gallery widths="240" heights="240"> File:Pusey House, St Cross College, St Giles', Oxford - geograph.org.uk - 2873647.jpg|Pusey House from [[St Giles', Oxford|St Giles']] File:Puseystcrossold.jpg|Pusey House in the 1920s File:Pusey House Chapel - Rood - geograph.org.uk - 2181809.jpg|A view of the [[rood]] from the Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament File:Pusey House Chapel - East end - geograph.org.uk - 2181807.jpg|The Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament File:StCrossQuadSnow.jpg|The east range and Chapel from the [[Quadrangle (architecture)|Quad]] File:StCrossOxford20050315.jpg|The [[Quadrangle (architecture)|Quad]] </gallery> ==See also== {{Portal|Christianity}} * [[List of miscellaneous works by Temple Moore]] ==References== {{Reflist}} ==Further reading== * Lepine, A. (2016). Modern Gothic and the House of God: Revivalism and Monasticism in Two Twentieth-Century Anglican Chapels. Visual Resources, 32(1-2), 1-26. * Orford, Barry A., Davage, William, and Ursell, Philip. ''Piety and Learning : The Principals of Pusey House 1884-2002 : Essays Presented to The Revd Philip Ursell''. Oxford: Pusey House, 2002. * "[http://tinyurl.galegroup.com/tinyurl/BMsSi5 The Pusey Memorial at Oxford]," ''Times'', 26 June 1885, p. 12. ''The Times Digital Archive'', Retrieved 16 July 2019. ==External links== * {{Commons category-inline}} * {{Official website|http://www.puseyhouse.org.uk/}} * [http://anglicanhistory.org/pusey/rfwilson1883.html Historical documentation on the founding of Pusey House] * [https://phlcatalogueblog.wordpress.com/ Library blog] {{Authority control}} [[Category:Anglo-Catholic educational establishments]] [[Category:Buildings and structures in Oxford]] [[Category:Christianity in Oxford]] [[Category:Education in Oxford]] [[Category:Educational institutions established in 1884]] [[Category:Organisations associated with the University of Oxford]] [[Category:Religious organisations based in England]] [[Category:St Cross College, Oxford]] [[Category:Temple Moore buildings]] [[Category:1884 establishments in England]]
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