Difference between revisions of "C.N. Barham"
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Revision as of 08:18, 20 January 2021
C.N. Barham
Revd. C.N. Barham | |||||||
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File:Barham, C.N..jpg | |||||||
Residence |
Hanshaw [1877] 34 Grange-gardens, West Kensington-park The Manse, Canterbury road, Whistable [1881] | ||||||
Occupation | church | ||||||
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Contents
Notes
Office Notes
House Notes
proposed 1877.01.09
1889.06.25 The Treasurer submitted the list of arrears, and it was resolved on the motion of Mr Lewis seconded by Mr Rudler that the following names be removed from the list of Members, viz.: Revd. C. Barham, C. Bennett Esq., J.L. Camp Esq.
Notes From Elsewhere
The Rev C N Barham, of Nottingham, who is a well known amateur of hypnotism and clairvoyance, sends St James's Budget the following - [...] Brisbane Courier, 25 Dec. 1890
Of the Rev. Barham I have been able to learn very little, not even his vital statistics. He was British, presumably a divine in the Anglican Church. He must have traveled to India as a missionary at one time, and retained an interest in propagating the gospel abroad. He later lived in Kent, where circa 1836 he married the daughter of a British esquire who lived in Calcutta. He apparently wrote religious songs in the 1860s, and was contributing to British literary magazines in the 1890s. Several websites confuse him with Richard Harris Barham, who was also a divine and who wrote The Ingoldsby Legends.
In the Westminster Review for February [1891?] C.N. Barham makes an urgent appeal for the abolition of child marriage in India
Publications
External Publications
The hill-men around Manipur, vol. 17 May 1891 The National Review
1891 volume of Cassell’s Family Magazine Illustrated, a British periodical, for a story called “Tracked: A Mystery of the Sea,” by the Rev. C. N. Barham, illustrated by W. H. Margetson [ill of hypnotism]
Ragged Relics [The Antiquary, Jan 1893]