He was an active English Freemason, having joined the 'Royal York Lodge' in Bristol on 21 December 1791,[2] aged 25, and served the lodge regularly until around the turn of the century, including serving as Master of the Lodge.[3][4]
In October 1813, at Lambeth Palace, he was consecrated Bishop of London, a post he was to occupy until 1828, when he became Archbishop of Canterbury.
Like very many other bishops at that time, Howley was an "old-High Churchman." These inherited a tradition of high views of the sacraments from the Caroline Divines and their successors. They held Catholic beliefs but were consistently anti-Roman. In this they differed from the more extreme Tractarians and their beliefs were often obscured,[how?] for example, in Richard William Church's classic account of the Oxford Movement.
Archbishop Howley presided over the coronation of William IV and Queen Adelaide in 1831. He supported William IV in blocking the appointment of Connop Thirwall.
Architecture was of particular interest to him. During his career, he initiated the renovation and rebuilding of: his official house at Oxford, his town residence while Bishop of London (32 St James's Square), Fulham Palace (also while he was Bishop of London), and finally, extensive renovations to Lambeth Palace. This last project was a virtual reconstruction of the Palace carried out by Edward Blore, the work beginning after 1828 and done mainly in the Gothic Revival style. It took several years and cost upwards of £60,000.
Family life
William Howley was married on 29 August 1805 to Mary Frances Belli, a daughter of John Belli, EICS, (1740–1805) of Southampton who had been Private Secretary to Warren Hastings. The Howleys had two sons and three daughters; neither son reached adulthood. One of his daughters married Sir George Howland Willoughby Beaumont, a nephew of Sir George Beaumont, 7th Baronet. William Howley died in 1848 1 day before his 82nd birthday, and was interred at Addington after an elaborate funeral.
References
^ abGarrard (The Rev'd Canon), James (2016). Archbishop Howley, 1828–1848 ((Prev. published Ashgate, 2015) ed.). London: Routledge. ISBN9781472451330.
^Powell, Arthur Cecil; Littleton, Joseph (1910). A History of Freemasonry in Bristol (First ed.). Bristol: Bennett Brothers.
^"Presentation to Dr George Oliver". The Freemasons' Quarterly Review. June 1844(Referencing Howley's Mastership){{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
^"From the Herald". The Freemasons' Quarterly Review. June 1835(An account of the initiation){{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
^"Assault on His Grace The Archbishop of Canterbury". The Times. No. 14927. London. 10 August 1832. p. 3.