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The Tithe Question in England in the Early Nineteenth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 March 2011

W. R. Ward
Affiliation:
Senior Lecturer in History, University of Manchester

Extract

When students of early nineteenth-century ecclesiastical history come to compile a religious ‘map’ of England, their attention will be drawn to a matter commented upon often enough by contemporaries, but almost entirely neglected now—the catastrophic decline in the influence of the Church in much of the countryside. The greatest triumphs of Nonconformity were won in the rural areas of Wales, and by the time of the religious census in 1851 English Dissenters had established a long lead over the Church in the East and North Ridings of Yorkshire, in Lincolnshire and Bedfordshire, were ahead in Huntingdonshire, and were within striking distance of drawing level in Northamptonshire, Buckinghamshire and Norfolk. In the southern and south-eastern counties the Church preserved its formal ascendancy, but often attracted a smaller proportion of the people to its services on census Sunday than in counties which were overrun by Dissent. The real tragedy for the Church in this period, it may be argued, was not that industrialisation concentrated people where her. endowments, manpower and accommodation were thinly spread, but that things went so badly where her resources were concentrated. It is the object of this paper to draw attention to this major question of ecclesiastical history and geography, and to suggest that part of the answer to it lies in the tithe question.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1965

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References

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page 80 note 9 Times, 17 November 1830, quoted in Hammond, Village Labourer, ii. 49.

page 81 note 1 Except in the backward county of Dorset, where almost a third of the population was at church on census day.

page 80 note 2 Horace Mann, who organised the census of religious worship in 1851, computed that not more than 58 per cent, of the community could attend church on any given Sunday: Census of Great Britain, 1851: Religious worship, Report, cxix–cxxi.