Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from George Edmund Street: Unpublished Notes and Reprinted Papers With an Essay
His people were substantial, of the strong British stock which is good for grafting on. In the Sixteenth century they were respected in and about Worcester; one of the name went to Parliament in 1563, and another had been Mayor in 1535. In the eighteenth century some of them went to Surrey, and early in the nineteenth Thomas Street was a solicitor in London. He had moved into the suburbs, however, before his youngest son, George Edmund Street, was born. This was in 1824. The boy did well enough at school, but at fifteen he was taken away, when his father removed from Camberwell to Crediton. No school was at hand, and a solicitor would not send his son to Eton and Oxford. Instead, he sent him to the London office. This was in 1840. After the father's death, in that year, young Street was anxious to go to college and to prepare for Holy Orders, but want of money made the hope impossible, and the strong vo cation proved to be for the Third Order a layman's part in building up the house of the Lord and making fair the ministry therein.
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