Rev A Millar Hagerty articles

[AWH. St Peters ended up as a storeroom for relics of old, bombed churches. Was thje vicarage also a storing place for stray vicars?

He was a man of grand, vaguely defined gestures and appeals – calls to action – rigid living]

South London Observer – Thursday 14 January 1954
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate (NSW) Wed 9 Dec 1953 Page 1
South London Observer – Thursday 19 July 1951
South London Observer – Thursday 01 March 1951
South London Observer – Thursday 21 September 1950
South London Observer – Friday 02 September 1949
Wood Green and Southgate Weekly Herald – Friday 25 May 1945
Sydenham, Forest Hill & Penge Gazette – Friday 20 April 1928
Kentish Express – Saturday 10 December 1927
Westerham Herald – Saturday 16 July 1927
Gloucester Citizen – Monday 22 June 1925
Daily Express – Saturday 20 June 1925
Westminster Gazette – Saturday 20 June 1925
Dover Chronicle – Saturday 30 August 1924
Central Somerset Gazette – Friday 01 August 1924
Daily News (London) – Saturday 24 May 1924
Lancashire Evening Post – Saturday 24 May 1924
Forest Hill & Sydenham Examiner – Friday 13 July 1923
Lady’s Pictorial – Saturday 15 September 1917

[AWH – “Owing to the war there was no reception.”]

Hull Daily Mail – Saturday 25 August 1917
Lewisham Borough News – Friday 20 October 1916
West Kent Argus and Borough of Lewisham News – Friday 01 October 1915

Says Clergyman: ‘The attitude of Church is cowardly’ – 62 Courtlands Avenue

Kentish Independent – Friday 22 September 1961

Says Clergyman: ‘The attitude of Church is cowardly’

The attitude of the Church towards H-bombs and the international situation generally is cowardly and tragic. And instead of remaining silent and playing down to political diplomacy it should call everyone to a day or week of prayers.

This was a view expressed by the Rev. A. Miller Hagerty, preaching at Holy Trinity Church, Eltham, recently.

Speaking about nuclear bombs and the dangers facing mankind, Mr. Hagerty who lives at 62 Courtlands Avenue, Lee, said that anti-bomb marching would have no effect on the international situation. What was needed was a “return to God’s standard of moral values” and a complete “change of mind,” which were the spiritual battle-cries at opening of the Christian era.


Rev Hagerty – a “finished elocutionist” in Australia in 1913

Goulburn Evening Penny Post (NSW : 1881 – 1940) View title info Tue 19 Aug 1913 Page 2 SATURDAY HALF-HOLIDAY.

‘Everything is suffering from change…’

[AWH – Possible start to booklet? Out the window modern, cube-shaped flats and maisonettes were springing up. In just xx months, his house would be demolished.

Maybe try to find the Catford letter.]

The Rev A. Miller Hagerty, sat in his soon-to-be demolished vicarage near its soon-to-be-demolished church, hammering out a letter that railed against change. “”Everything in this age and generation is suffering from change,” he wrote, as modern flats and maisonettes sprung up around him.

That change “inflicts itself on the community life socially, economically and even religiously,” he added in his letter to the Sydenham, Forest Hill & Penge Gazette’s “You Tell Us” page. “Road traffic bewilders us, housing is an ever growing problem, the equitable adjustment of wages and prices, the turmoil of strikes, with thier dislocations, are a nightmare.” Beyond Courtlands Avenue, things were even worse. “The international strife of the powers breed the fear of the possible disintegration of civilisation.”

He kicked off a tradition of Courtlands Avenue letter writers. Though they were less angst-ridden as time went along.]

Sydenham, Forest Hill & Penge Gazette – Friday 16 September 1960