Born at 38 Mottram Street, Stockport, Cheshire on 9 August 1870,[1] he was educated at Cotton College, Oscott, and the English College, Rome.[2] He was ordained to the priesthood on 10 March 1894 and same year came to Shrewsbury to assist his uncle,[3] then a canon at the cathedral there, serving as curate until 1897.[2] He subsequently served the cathedral as priest-in-charge from 1897 to 1932, also as Canon Theologian from 1910, Vicar General from 1925 and Provost to the cathedral chapter from 1927.[2]
In Shrewsbury public life he was a member of the Shrewsbury Schools Board from 1898,[2] and later Vice-Chairman of the Shrewsbury Education Committee which superseded the board in 1902. He was until his death member of the Shrewsbury Free Library Committee and the council of the Shropshire Archaeological Society.[3]
He died in office at his official residence, The Council House in Shrewsbury on 3 June 1949, aged 78,[1] and was buried in the grave of his uncle in Shrewsbury General Cemetery in Longden Road following a pontifical Requiem Mass at Shrewsbury Cathedral.[3]