Person    | Male  Born 1827  Died 1920

Reverend Canon John Erskine Clarke

Categories: Journalism / Publishing, Religion

Countries: India, Scotland

Clergyman. He issued the first parish magazine and established several other religious publications. Responsible for founding churches, schools and hospitals in Battersea.

Born in India to an official of the East India Company. His father died in 1835 and the family returned to Edinburgh. As a young man he was a successful rower, competing at Henley Royal Regatta. After university he took holy orders and served as a curate in a number of non-London parishes, at one of which he started the world's first commercial parish magazine.

In 1872 he became Vicar of St Mary's Church, Battersea and remained there until 1909. There, he founded the "Provident Dispensary" (later Bolingbroke Hospital, founded 1880) and established "The Vicarage School for Girls" at the vicarage house near the river (this 1866 map shows a vicarage just south-east of Battersea Square). The school later moved to Clapham Common. Instrumental in establishing Battersea Grammar School. 

On 27 July 1895, Clarke was made Honorary Chaplain to Queen Victoria, and after her death in 1901 continued in the same role to King Edward VII and then to King George V.

Died at St Luke's Vicarage, 192 Ramsden Road (beside St Luke's church), now (2025) Broomwood School.

This image comes from The History of Wandsworth Common where it is dated 1912.

Sources: Wikipedia, History of Wandsworth Common, UCL Bartlett.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Reverend Canon John Erskine Clarke

Commemorated ati

Bolingbroke Hospital - 1880, founded

This is the 1937 central administration block and main entrance for the Hospi...

Read More

Other Subjects

Richardson Evans

Richardson Evans

Civil servant, journalist and author. He served in the Indian Civil Service, for North-Western Provinces from 1867 to 1876, after which he worked in London as a journalist. From the 1880s onwards, ...

Person, Community / Clubs, Journalism / Publishing, Belgium, India

1 memorial
Thomas de Quincey

Thomas de Quincey

Born Manchester. Author, best known for "Confessions of an English Opium-Eater" (1821). Was as addicted to books as much as to drink or opium, sometimes renting an extra lodging (which he could not...

Person, Journalism / Publishing, Literature, Scotland

1 memorial
Robert Maxwell

Robert Maxwell

Publisher, politician and swindler. Born Ján Ludvík Hyman Binyamin Hoch, in Slatinské Doly (now Solotyino, Ukraine). He came to Britain after WW2 where he built up the Pergamon Press, acquired the ...

Person, Journalism / Publishing, Politics & Administration, Czechoslovakia

1 memorial
Tin Pan Alley

Tin Pan Alley

‘Tin Pan Alley’ originally, 1885, referred to the section of New York City where music publishers and songwriters were based.  In 1920s London music shops congregated in Denmark Street and the term...

Place, Journalism / Publishing, Music / songs

1 memorial
Joseph Whitaker

Joseph Whitaker

Born in London, apprenticed to a bookseller aged fourteen. With experience of a number of firms he set up his own publishing business. 1858 launched The Bookseller. 1869 published the first issue o...

Person, Journalism / Publishing, Sport / Games

1 memorial