Carlile, Wilson
CARLILE, WILSON: Church of England; founder
of the Church Army; b. at Brixton (a suburb
s.w. of London) Jan. 14, 1847. He was educated
at Highbury College, London, but did not take a
degree. He entered commercial life in 1862, but in
1878 matriculated at the London College of Divinity,
and was ordered deacon in 1880 and ordained
priest in the following year. He was curate of
Kensington from 1880 to 1882, when he founded
the Church Army in the Westminster slums, and
in 1890 established the Social System of Church
Army in Marylebone. He was also rector of
Netteswell, Essex, in 1890–91, and since the latter
year has been rector of St. Mary-at-Hill, Eastcheap,
London. He was appointed a prebendary of St.
Paul's Cathedral, London, in 1906, and has written:
The Church and Conversion (London, 1882); Spiritual
Difficulties (1885), and The Continental Outcast
(in collaboration with V. W. Carlile; 1906).