Henry Rutter
Henry Rutter (real name Banister) (26 February 1755 – 17 September 1838 near Dodding Green, Westmorland) was an English Roman Catholic priest. He took part in the controversy over Robert Southey's Book of the Church, (1824), in which Charles Butler was the Catholic protagonist.
Life
He was the son of Adam Banister of Hesketh Bank and Agnes, daughter of Richard Butler, of Mawdesley, Lancashire. On 26 September 1768, he went to Douai College, where he found his uncle, Rev. Robert Banister. In May, 1781, he became professor at St. Omer's College for the secular clergy.
On the English mission, he served several places in the north before his appointment in 1817 to Yealand, Lancashire, where he remained till January 1834. The rest of his life was spent at Dodding Green.
Works
- Answer to Dr. Southey, a contribution to the controversy provoked by Southey's book
- Evangelical Harmony, re-edited (1857) by Husenbeth.
Rutter's other works, chiefly scriptural exegeses and devotional translations, are enumerated and described by Joseph Gillow.[1]
References
- Joseph Gillow, Biographical and Bibliographical Dictionary of the English Catholics (5 vols, 1885-1902)
- Attribution
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Henry Rutter". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. The entry cites:
- Orthodox Journal (VII, 223)
External links
Works by or about Henry Rutter in libraries (WorldCat catalog)