Ball, born 11 March 1833[6] in Clifton, Bristol, was the son of Joseph and Rebecca Ball.[7] He had a brother A.W. Ball.[1] He graduated from Christ's College, Cambridge[8] with a B.A. in 1858 and a M.A. in 1864.[6]
He was the rural dean of Peterborough, appointed by the Bishop of Creighton.[7] By 1891, he was appointed the Honorary Canon of Peterborough Cathedral by Bishop Magee.[7][9] He was elected proctor for the Diocese of Peterborough to Convocation.[7]
Ball wrote The Apostle of the Gentiles, His Life and Letters in 1885. By that time, he also had written The Promised Seed and Lessons on our Lord's Ministry.[10] He also wrote The Faith in Outline, Plain Thoughts on a Great Subject, The Blankthorpe Papers, and The Dispensation of the Spirit.[7]
Personal life
He married Mary Eliza Saunders on 28 December 1871,[11] the daughter of Rev. A. P. Saunders, DD, who was the headmaster of the Charter House and the Dean of Peterborough.[7] They had a son, Richard Reynold Ball, on 8 August 1882.[12]
In 1891, eleven members of the family settled their shares or interests in Madeley Manor on trustees, Charles Richard Ball being the leading trustee and reputed lord of the manor. Between 1871 and 1889, the manor had passed to the Ball family, descendants of Joseph Reynolds's daughter Rebecca and her husband (and second cousin) Joseph Ball.[1][13]
^"Madeley: Manor and other estates". British History Online. Retrieved 4 March 2017. From a footnote: "abstr. of title of the Revd. C. R. Ball to land at Madeley Wood, 1893."