Edmund Roberts Larken (1809–1895) was an English cleric and Christian socialist, a patron of radical causes and author on social matters. Along with other unconventional views, he was noted as possibly the first parish priest of his time to wear a beard.[1]
Larken matriculated at Trinity College, Oxford in 1829, graduating B.A. in 1833, and M.A. in 1836.[5][6] He was ordained deacon in 1833, and priest in 1834. At Oxford he considered himself a follower of Richard Whateley.[7][8] He became rector of Burton by Lincoln, remaining there from 1843 to 1895; he was presented to the living by his brother-in-law Lord Monson.[7] In an invasion scare in 1859, a Lincolnshire rifle corps was raised and Larken was chaplain in it.[9] An unsuccessful campaign was mounted for him to become Dean of Lincoln in 1860.[10]
Interests
Larken was interested in the socialist ideas of Charles Fourier, including an account of them with one of his sermons in 1842.[11] He collaborated with John Minter Morgan on schemes for village settlement.[12] In 1847 he became chairman of a building society, of which George Boole was a director.[13] Larken and Boole also worked together in the 1850s on a plan to reduce the impact of prostitution in Lincoln.[14] Other involvements were with the Leeds Redemption Society and a co-operative flour mill.[7]
A sermon preached at Horbling, Lincolnshire, in obedience to the Queen's letter in behalf of the distressed manufacturers, on Sunday, July 24, 1842. With an appendix containing a sketch of the industrial system of Fourier (1842)[19]
The necessity of toleration to the exercise of private judgment, a sermon (1847)[20]
The Miller of Angibault (1847), translated from George Sand, edited by Matilda Hays.[21]
^Edward Royle, Victorian Infidels: the origins of the British secularist movement, 1791-1866 (1974), p. 149 and p. 146; Google Books.
^James A. Secord, Victorian Sensation: the extraordinary publication, reception, and secret authorship of Vestiges of the natural history of creation (2000), p. 483; Google Books.
^Burton-by-Lincoln.), Edmund Roberts Larken (M A. , Rector of (30 November 1837). "Sermons on the Commandments" – via Google Books.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Samuel Halkett, John Laing, A Dictionary of the Anonymous and Pseudonymous Literature of Great Britain. Including the Works of Foreigners Written in, or Translated into the English Language vol. 2 (1883, 2006 reprint), cols. 1616–7; Google Books.
^Cuthbert Wilfrid Whitaker, A register of S. Nicholas College, Lancing, from its foundation at Shoreham in August, 1848 to the commencement of the month of November, 1900 (c. 1900), p. 58; archive.org.
^"Obituary: Admiral Sir Frank Larken – The War Against Turkey 1915–18". The Times. 22 January 1853.
^
Pine, L. G. (ed.) Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, 17th edition. (London: Burke's Peerage Ltd, 1952), p. 1940
^Townend, Peter. Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, 18th edition. volume 3. (London: Burke's Peerage Ltd, 1965–1972) p. 617