William Benham
William Benham, the son of the village postmaster, was born in West Meon, near Petersfield, on 15th January 1831. He was trained as a teacher at St Mark's College in Chelsea.
Benham taught at the Blewcoat School, Westminster, but in 1856 he began attending lectures at King's College, London, where he was influence of Frederick Denison Maurice, the leader of the Christian Socialist movement. According to his biographer, Julian Lock, this "permanently affected his religious position in the direction of attempted engagement with intellectual trends outside the church, such as evolutionism."
Benham was ordained in 1857 and appointed divinity tutor and lecturer in English literature at St Mark's College under Derwent Coleridge. In 1864 he became editorial secretary to the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge and professor of modern history at Queen's College, Harley Street.
Benham's preaching attracted the attention of Charles Longley, the Archbishop of Canterbury, who made him in 1867 the first vicar of the newly formed parish of Addington. Longley died in October 1868 but his replacement, Archibald Tait also valued the abilities of Benham and in 1872 he bestowed on him the important vicarage of Margate.
While the vicar of St John's the Baptist Church he met Ellen Ternan, the former mistress of Charles Dickens. Her biographer,
