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William Carr Smith : ウィキペディア英語版 | William Carr Smith
William Carr Smith (1857–1930) was a Church of England clergyman, best known as the rector of St James' Church, Sydney from 1896 to 1910, whose Anglo-Catholic and Christian Socialist ideals transformed Sydney's oldest church. Carr Smith's teaching was said to be "continuous, methodical, very direct, very plain, and quite fearless". ==Early years== William Isaac Carr Smith was born 13 October 1857, at Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, son of George Smith, a merchant seaman, and his wife Elizabeth, née Tolgat.〔 Smith trained first as a teacher and then studied for the ministry at Lichfield Diocesan Theological College. He was ordained as a deacon in 1880 and as a priest in June 1881.〔K. J. Cable, "(William Isaac Carr Smith )", ''Australian Dictionary of Biography'', (retrieved 21 October 2013)〕 Carr served as a curate for seven years in several parishes in Staffordshire before taking the parish of St John's, Longton, in 1887. During his time as a curate he was influenced by the Christian Socialism.〔 He remained unmarried all his life.〔
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