He married Ethel Maud Du Ve (1878-1957),[4] fourth daughter of Charles Ignatz Du Ve (1836-1915), and Agnes Adamson Du Ve (1845-1915), née Buntine, on 4 September 1901.[5][6][7][8] They had four sons, and one daughter:
While at St. Mary's he served as Caulfield Grammar School's chaplain.
In 1931, the school (at the time owned by Walter Murray Buntine) ceased being a "private school", and it became a "public school", with its operation conducted by a private company limited by guarantee.[35][36] Langley served on the Caulfield Grammar School Council (the company's governing body) from its foundation in 1931 until 1945.[37]
Military chaplain
On 1 January 1916, Langley was appointed as a military chaplain to the First AIF.[38]
Shelford Girls' Grammar School
As the Vicar of St Mary's, Langley had been giving the pupils of the highly respected Shelford Girls' School weekly lessons in religious instruction for quite a number of years.[39]
The school, established in 1898 (in Glen Eira Road) by Emily Dixon, was relocated to 77 Allison Road, Elsternwick by its second principal, Dora Mary Petrie Blundell (1865-1943),[40][41][42] who served as the school's second principal from 1904 to 1921.[43]
Dora was assisted and supported by her sisters, Lucy Annie Blundell (1850-1922), Fanny Blundell (1851-1937) and Margaret Helen Petrie Blundell (1866-1953),[44][45][46] in performing her wide range of duties.
In 1923, Langley was responsible for the relocation of the school from 77 Allison Road, Elsternwick to "Helenslea" in Hood Crescent, Caulfield North — adjacent to St Mary's Church — the re-establishment of it as the Shelford Girls' Grammar School, and the appointment of Miss Ada Mary Thomas as its head mistress.[47][48][49][50] Miss Thomas went on to serve as the school's headmistress from 1922 to 1945.
St. Margaret's, Caulfield
As Vicar of St. Mary's, he was also responsible for the foundation of St. Margaret's Anglican Church, in Ripley Grove, Caulfield, in 1923. St. Margaret's operated as "chapel of ease" to St. Mary's church.[51] Its adjacent hall was also the home of the 2nd. Caulfield Scout Troop.[52]
Dean of Melbourne
In August 1942, Langley was elected Dean of Melbourne[53][54] — replacing Archbishop Head who had acted as dean since the retirement of George Aickin in 1932 — and continued in that position until he retired in April 1947.[55]
Political views
According to Hansen (2000), Langley "associated himself with socialist movements and marched annually in the May Day procession".[56] Over his lifetime, he was quite outspoken on a wide range of political and social issues:[57]
"Dean Langley has created a place of respect and affection in the life of Melbourne by his fearless and creative utterances in the Cathedral and on the Yarra bank as to the implications of the Christian Gospel to the social order as well as the life of individuals" — Williamstown Chronicle, 5 September 1947.[58]
Death
He died on 28 November 1968, at Hawthorn,[59] and was cremated.[60]
^The Morwell Historical Society News, Vol.4, (1965), p.20:
"The Du Ve family is of Polish origin, having left that country a long time ago because of political unrest there, and finding refuge in England.
Charles Ignatz Du Ve was born in England in 1835, and emigrated to Australia in 1853, at the age of 18 years. He seems to have spent the rest of his life in Gippsland, living for the greater part of the time at Rosedale. He was manager of Gelantipy Station round about 1865, but he is better known as the Clerk of Courts for a number of townships in a wide area, stretching from Moe to Sale. For example, the Rosedale records show that he was the Clerk of Courts there in 1867, Secretary of the original Church of England Board of Guardians, and a member of the School Committee. The Morwell Directory for 1888 lists him there as the Clerk of Courts. In 1864, he married Miss Agnes Adamson Buntine, a member of another very early Rosedale family. There was a large family of twelve children (five boys and seven girls), one of whom, died in infancy. Both Charles Du Ve and his wife, Agnes Du Ve, died in 1915. One daughter, Miss Ethel Maud Du Ve, married Canon Langley, and some of their descendants still live in the Boolarra area. Another son, Mr. Hugh Du Ve, was a lay reader in the Church of England, and frequently took the service at the church in Morwell."
Hansen, I. V. (2000). "Henry Thomas Langley (1877–1968)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 29 November 2017 – via Australian Dictionary of Biography.
Webber, Horace (1981). Years May Pass On... Caulfield Grammar School, 1881–1981. Centenary Committee, Caulfield Grammar School, (East St Kilda). ISBN0-9594242-0-2.
Wilkinson, Ian R. (1997). The Fields At Play – 115 years of sport at Caulfield Grammar School 1881–1996. Playright Publishing. ISBN0-949853-60-7.