Letter from Cardinal Manning to Cardinal Newman sending on a letter accidentally sent to him and commenting on their long lives.
Identifier
B061-A003-D075
Call Number
B061-A003-D075
Collection
Birmingham Oratory
Creator
Manning, Henry Edward, Cardinal, 1808-1892
Contributor
Newman, John Henry, Cardinal, 1801-1890
Date
1884-05-08
Page Count
2
Coverage
Archbishops House, York Place, Portman Square, London, Middlesex, England
Location
e-resource|Birmingham Oratory
Type
Text
Content Type
Letter
Language
English
Publication Origin
Not Published
Authors & Recipients
Manning, Henry Edward, Cardinal, 1808-1892
Born at Copped Hall, Totteridge, Hertfordshire, the youngest son of William Manning, a West India Merchant, MP and sometime governor of the Bank of England. Attended Harrow School and matriculated at Balliol College, Oxford. Fellow of Merton College 1832, taking Anglican Orders and serving at Lavington-with-Graffham, West Sussex, first as Curate and then Rector. Married 1833 to Caroline Sargeant, widowed 1837. Appointed Archdeacon of Chichester 1841. Received into the Catholic Church 1851 being Ordained in Catholic Orders at Farm Street. Initially on the staff at St Edmund's, Ware, then established the Bayswater Mission and the Oblates of St Charles. Served as Provost of Westminster from 1857, then elected 2nd Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster 1865. Created Cardinal in 1875.
Newman, John Henry, Cardinal, 1801-1890
John Henry Newman stands as a giant in the fields of theology, philosophy, and education. Influencing many academic and spiritual disciplines, Newman's writings and his lifelong search for religious truth continue to inspire scholars throughout the world. Newman started his public life as a fellow of Oriel College and, soon after, as Vicar of St. Mary the Virgin Church in Oxford, England. He was a leader of the Oxford Movement which began in 1833. A prominent member of the Church of England for the first half of his life, he converted to Roman Catholicism in 1845. Two years later, Newman founded the first English-speaking Oratory of St. Philip Neri in Birmingham, England. In 1851, Newman undertook the founding of the Catholic University of Ireland in Dublin. He was made a cardinal of the Catholic Church in 1879. His many scholarly works have remained a significant force.