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1922 Encyclopædia Britannica/Maclagan, William Dalrymple

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25550821922 Encyclopædia Britannica, Volume 31 — Maclagan, William Dalrymple

MACLAGAN, WILLIAM DALRYMPLE (1826–1910), Archbishop of York, was born in Edinburgh June 18 1826. He began life in the army, retiring as lieutenant in 1852 in order to go to Cambridge to study for the Church. He became a London rector, first at Newington and then at St. Mary Abbott's, Kensington, and in 1878 was nominated by the Crown to the bishopric of Lichfield. In 1891 he was made Archbishop of York. In 1899 he sat as assessor with Dr. Temple, Archbishop of Canterbury, when the decision was given against the use of incense and other ritualistic practices, and though himself a strong High Churchman he loyally upheld the primate's “opinion.” He resigned his archbishopric in 1908, and died in London Sept. 19 1910.