Johnson, Pamela Hansford. Important to Me. Macmillan; Scribner.
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Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Pamela Hansford Johnson | Religion, too, became important to PHJ
in her youth. Though she notes a streak of emotional Calvinism Johnson, Pamela Hansford. Important to Me. Macmillan; Scribner. 13 |
Cultural formation | Lucas Malet | LM
was born into the English professional class or intelligentsia. She grew up in the heart of the Church of England
, but later, despite the irreverence with which her writings handle religious topics, converted... |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Elstob | She was a middle-class, English, presumably white, High Tory Anglican
. |
Cultural formation | Eleanor Anne Porden | EAB was baptised into the Church of England
. Her religious belief was broad-minded, liberal, tolerant. Faced with the Evangelical tendencies of the family of her future husband, who disapproved of many of her Sunday... |
Cultural formation | Margaret Gatty | She was born into an English, presumably white, strongly Anglican
family of the professional class. Male members of her family on both sides had risen in their professions through sheer ability, and there was a... |
Cultural formation | Edith J. Simcox | She was christened on 11 September 1844 at Christchurch Greyfriars in London. Her family belonged to the English middle class and was presumably white. After an Anglican
upbringing, she moved away from conventional religious... |
Cultural formation | Susanna Hopton | Born into the rising and prosperous English trading class, with strong gentry connections, SH
was baptised into the Church ofEngland
. Possibly out of loyalty to her dead father, who worked for the royal family... |
Cultural formation | Fanny Kingsley | FK
was presumably white, although Brenda Colloms
describes her physical appearance as dark and handsome in a buxom, Spanish style. Her family was English and engaged in commerce on her father's side, Anglo-Irish and aristocratic... |
Cultural formation | Anne Whitehead | She was baptised an Anglican
, and her Anglican family disowned her when she joined the Society of Friends
. Her conversion, which made her the first Londoner to join the Quakers, probably happened around... |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Melvill | EM
was an upper-class Scotswoman who was born into the Church of Scotland
and remained a fervent and radical member of it. She is presumed to have undergone a conversion experience within this church, and... |
Cultural formation | Clara Balfour | Herself baptised (after her father's death) into the Church of England
, she later converted and joined the Baptists
with the rest of her family in 1840. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. |
Cultural formation | Rhoda Broughton | |
Cultural formation | E. Nesbit | |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Richardson | |
Cultural formation | Ann Gomersall | AG
was baptised in the Church of England
at Portsmouth. Her parents were unlikely to have omitted this sacrament when she was little if they were Anglicans; it seems therefore that she probably converted... |
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