Robert Walker (priest, Of Seathwaite)
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Robert Walker (1709–1802), called Wonderful Walker, was a
Church of England The Church of England (C of E) is the State religion#State churches, established List of Christian denominations, Christian church in England and the Crown Dependencies. It is the mother church of the Anglicanism, Anglican Christian tradition, ...
priest in Dunnerdale, now in
Cumbria Cumbria ( ) is a ceremonial county in North West England. It borders the Scottish council areas of Dumfries and Galloway and Scottish Borders to the north, Northumberland and County Durham to the east, North Yorkshire to the south-east, Lancash ...
. In around 1804,
William William is a masculine given name of Germanic languages, Germanic origin. It became popular in England after the Norman Conquest, Norman conquest in 1066,All Things William"Meaning & Origin of the Name"/ref> and remained so throughout the Middle ...
and
Dorothy Wordsworth Dorothy Wordsworth (25 December 1771 – 25 January 1855) was an English author, poet, and diarist. She was the sister of the Romanticism, Romantic poet William Wordsworth, and the two were close all their adult lives. Dorothy Wordsworth had ...
became interested in the local stories about him; William mentioned Walker in '' The Excursion'', and later in one of his sonnets.


Life

Walker was born at Undercrag in Seathwaite, Dunnerdale,
Furness Furness ( ) is a peninsula and region of Cumbria, England. Together with the Cartmel Peninsula it forms North Lonsdale, Historic counties of England, historically an exclave of Lancashire. On 1 April 2023 it became part of the new unitary author ...
, then in
Lancashire Lancashire ( , ; abbreviated ''Lancs'') is a ceremonial county in North West England. It is bordered by Cumbria to the north, North Yorkshire and West Yorkshire to the east, Greater Manchester and Merseyside to the south, and the Irish Sea to ...
, in 1709. He was the son of Nicholas Walker, a
yeoman farmer Yeoman is a noun originally referring either to one who owns and cultivates land or to the middle ranks of servants in an English royal or noble household. The term was first documented in mid-14th-century England. The 14th century witnessed ...
, and his wife Elizabeth, and was the youngest of 12 children; his eldest brother was born about 1684. He was taught at an elementary level in Seathwaite Chapel. Regarded as frail by his parents, he sought more education and ordination, in Eskdale and the Vale of Lorton, with support from clerical patrons. Walker was schoolmaster in
Loweswater Loweswater is one of the smaller lakes in the English Lake District. The village of Loweswater is situated to the east of the lake. Geography The lake is not far from Cockermouth and is also easily reached from elsewhere in West Cumbria. T ...
in 1735, when he became curate of Seathwaite. In 1755–6, he proposed to the
bishop of Chester The Bishop of Chester is the Ordinary of the Church of England Diocese of Chester in the Province of York. The diocese extends across most of the historic county boundaries of Cheshire, including the Wirral Peninsula and has its see in the ...
that the curacy of
Ulpha Ulpha is a small village and civil parish in the Duddon Valley in the Lake District National Park in Cumbria, England. Historic counties of England, Historically in Cumberland, it forms part of the Cumberland unitary authority area. At Ulpha a ...
should be joined to that of Seathwaite, but was turned down. A few years later the curacy was slightly enlarged. Walker farmed his
glebe A glebe (, also known as church furlong, rectory manor or parson's close(s)) is an area of land within an ecclesiastical parish used to support a parish priest. The land may be owned by the church, or its profits may be reserved to the church. ...
land, and laboured for other farmers. He earned small sums as
scrivener A scrivener (or scribe) was a person who, before the advent of compulsory education, could literacy, read and write or who wrote letters as well as court and legal documents. Scriveners were people who made their living by writing or copying w ...
to the surrounding villages. He also acted as schoolmaster, for gifts rather than charging fees.


Death and legacy

Walker died on 25 June 1802, and was buried in Seathwaite churchyard. His tombstone later had a new inscription cut, and a
brass Brass is an alloy of copper and zinc, in proportions which can be varied to achieve different colours and mechanical, electrical, acoustic and chemical properties, but copper typically has the larger proportion, generally copper and zinc. I ...
was erected to his memory in Seathwaite chapel. He left £1500 or £2000 in savings.


Reputation in literature

Walker dressed and lived simply. His life was sketched by
William Wordsworth William Wordsworth (7 April 177023 April 1850) was an English Romantic poetry, Romantic poet who, with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, helped to launch the Romanticism, Romantic Age in English literature with their joint publication ''Lyrical Balla ...
, who alluded to his grave in '' The Excursion'' (bk. vii. ll. 351 sq.), and in the eighteenth sonnet of ''The River Duddon, A Series of Sonnets'' (1820) ("Seathwaite Chapel") referred to Walker as the "Gospel Teacher Whose good works formed an endless retinue, A pastor such as Chaucer's verse portrays, Such as the heaven-taught skill of Herbert drew And tender Goldsmith crowned with deathless praise." Walker's character was idealised to some extent by Wordsworth. Robert Walker Bamford (1796–1838), a cleric and great-grandson of Walker, published a memoir in the ''
Christian Remembrancer The ''Christian Remembrancer'' was a high-church periodical which ran from 1819 to 1868. Joshua Watson and Henry Handley Norris, the owners of the ''British Critic'', encouraged Frederick Iremonger to start the ''Christian Remembrancer'' as a ...
'' in 1819, cited by Wordsworth in his notes to the sonnet. Both Bamford and Wordsworth omitted to mention Walker's sale of
ale Ale is a style of beer, brewed using a warm fermentation method. In medieval England, the term referred to a drink brewed without hops. As with most beers, ale typically has a bittering agent to balance the malt and act as a preservative. Ale ...
, which was one of the ways in which he supported himself. Richard Parkinson, who included material about Walker in a novel, ''The Old Church Clock'' (1843), also slanted the facts. He wrote in the novel's introduction:
"Nor was it merely as an exemplary parish priest, (and well does Robert Walker deserve the title of Priest of the Lakes .., that the character of this good man is to be regarded, but as one striking instance out of many (if the history of our Parish Priesthood ''could'' now be written) in which the true liturgical teaching of the church was strictly maintained in the lower ranks of the clergy, when it had been either totally discontinued or had withered down to a mere lifeless form, in the higher."
Edwin Waugh included an account of Walker in his ''Rambles in the Lake Country and its Borders'' from 1861. In 1892, Samuel Barber wrote that "The wonderful Walker type of parson may be considered about as extinct as the
Dodo The dodo (''Raphus cucullatus'') is an extinction, extinct flightless bird that was endemism, endemic to the island of Mauritius, which is east of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean. The dodo's closest relative was the also-extinct and flightles ...
."


Family

Walker and his wife Ann (née Tyson, died 1800, at age around 93) had ten children, of whom eight—three sons and five daughters—survived to adulthood. With an income as priest calculated as £20 per annum in 1755, Walker supported his family's finances in other ways, including by spinning wool, which became a family business. The eldest son, Zaccheus Walker (1736–1808), joined the engineering firm
Boulton and Watt Boulton & Watt was an early British engineering and manufacturing firm in the business of designing and making marine and stationary steam engines. Founded in the English West Midlands around Birmingham in 1775 as a partnership between the Engl ...
and married Mary Boulton, sister of Matthew Boulton. Their only daughter married
Joseph Vincent Barber Joseph Vincent Barber (1788–1838), known as Vincent Barber, was an English landscape painter and art teacher. Born in Birmingham, the son of artist and drawing master Joseph Barber, he took over the running of his father's drawing academy in G ...
. Another son, who predeceased his father, was William Tyson Walker. He was a curate and schoolteacher at
Ulverston Ulverston is a market town and civil parish in Westmorland and Furness, Cumbria, England. Historic counties of England, Historically in Lancashire, it lies a few miles south of the Lake District Lake District National Park, National Park and j ...
, where one of his pupils was the future
Sir John Barrow, 1st Baronet Sir John Barrow, 1st Baronet, (19 June 1764 – 23 November 1848) was an English geographer, linguist, writer and civil servant best known for serving as the Second Secretary to the Admiralty from 1804 until 1845. Early life Barrow was ...
. Barrow remembered him, around 1777, as a good classical scholar, educated at
Trinity College Dublin Trinity College Dublin (), officially titled The College of the Holy and Undivided Trinity of Queen Elizabeth near Dublin, and legally incorporated as Trinity College, the University of Dublin (TCD), is the sole constituent college of the Unive ...
.


Notes

;Attribution {{DEFAULTSORT:Walker, Robert 1709 births 1802 deaths 18th-century English Anglican priests Schoolteachers from Cumbria People from Furness