Born in Portarlington, County Laois, in 1854, the son of Rev. William Winslow Sterling and Jane Langley, he attended Portarlington School, his father ministered in St. Paul's (French Church).
Educated at Trinity College, Dublin (BA 1875, BD 1878, MA 1882, DD 1884)[2] A noted scholar he won Archbishop King's and Bishop Forster's Prizes in 1875, Elrington, Warren, and the Downes Prizes in 1876, also the Divinity Test and Theology Exhibition in 1876.
His eldest son Dr. Winslow Seymour Sterling Berry B.A. M.B. B.Ch., B.A.O., served as Captain in the Royal Army Medical Corp serving with the 9th Royal Irish Fusiliers,[7] during the Great War, later in life he served as the Irish Governments Deputy Chief Medical Advisor, and later registrar of the Westmoreland Lock Hospital.[8]
^The Times, Wednesday, Mar 26, 1913; pg. 10; Issue 40169; col C Ecclesiastical Intelligence
^Masuzawa, Tomoko. (2005). The Invention of World Religions: Or, How European Universalism Was Preserved in the Language of Pluralism. University of Chicago Press. p. 140. ISBN978-0-226-50988-4