William Palmer Ladd

William Palmer Ladd (May 13, 1870 – July 1, 1941) was an Episcopal priest, seminary professor and dean, and liturgical scholar.

Ladd was born in Lancaster, New Hampshire. He studied at Dartmouth College (class of 1891) and received a B.D. from the General Theological Seminary in 1897. Ladd was ordained deacon on June 11, 1897, and priest on June 11, 1898.

After work as a parish priest in the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire, he served as professor of church history (1904-1941) at Berkeley Divinity School, of which he later became dean (1918-1941). The School had been founded in Middletown, Connecticut, but Ladd worked to move it to New Haven, home of Yale University, believing connection with a major university and presence in an urban center were better suited to training of clergy.

As Dean of Berkeley Ladd was seen as an inspiring if sometimes controversial figure. Socialist in sympathies, he chaired a major review of child welfare for the State of Connecticut. He was responsible for bringing a number of sympathetic Anglican thinkers as visiting professors including Percy Dearmer and Geoffrey Studdert Kennedy.

Ladd was active in the dissemination of Liturgical Movement principles in the Episcopal Church in the United States of America. His book Prayer Book Interleaves, published only after his death, was based on columns that had appeared in the Episcopal Church magazine "The Witness." It was reprinted in 1957 with a new introduction by his student Massey H. Shepherd and then again in the centenary year of his appointment as Dean of Berkeley.

See also

Bibliography

  • Prayer Book Interleaves: Some Reflections on How the Book of Common Prayer Might Be Made More Influential (1943).

References

    • Michael Moriarty, "William Palmer Ladd and the Origins of the Episcopal Liturgical Movement," Church History 08/1995; 64(03):438 - 451. DOI:10.2307/3168949


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