Barry, William Francis
BARRY, WILLIAM FRANCIS: English Roman
Catholic; b. at London Apr. 21, 1849. He was
educated at St. Mary’s College, Oscott, English
College, Rome, and Gregorian University, Rome
(D.D., 1873). He was ordained to the priesthood
at St. John Lateran, Rome, in 1873, and from that
year until 1877 was vice-president and professor of
philosophy at the Birmingham Diocesan Seminary.
He was then appointed to the professorship of theology
at St. Mary’s College, Oscott, where he remained
until 1880. From 1881 to 1883 he was
curate at Snow Hill, Wolverhampton, and since
the latter year has been rector of St. Birinus,
Dorchester, Oxfordshire. He was a delegate to
the Temperance Convention at the Chicago World’s
Fair in 1893, and lectured before the Royal Institution,
London, in 1896. Since 1889 he has been
a member and lecturer of the Catholic Truth
Society, and in 1897 was elected vice-president of
the Irish Literary Society of London. In addition
to numerous briefer studies and contributions to
periodicals, he has written The New Antigone
(London, 1887); The Two Standards (1899);
Arden Massiter (1900); The Wizard’s Knot
(1901); The Papal Monarchy (1902); The Day Spring
(1903); Cardinal Newman (1903); Perils of Revolt
(1904); Ernest Renan (1905); and The Tradition of
Scripture (1906; put upon the Index).