This account of a quiet life is thanks to information from Stella Sterry, and to letters that were found years ago in a house clearance in Leeds. They seem to have survived by chance, possibly because of Mr John Gaskin, MBE, of Whitby. He was a significant figure in organisations in the town in the first half of the 20th century. He was very interested in local history and philately and for several decades was a solicitors' clerk with Messrs Buchannan and Son, and then with the successor firm Buchannan and White. However he came across the letters and whatever his reason – local history or the unusual postal markings – he kept the letters and they are now to be found at Northallerton Archives. I'm quoting below from a transcript and I have made some alterations for readability's sake.
William Atkinson was born on 16 May 1755 at Kirkleatham, where his father Thomas Atkinson (1722-92) was Master of Sir William Turner's Hospital. Perhaps he was named for his father's brother William, who died only two months later in the fever epidemic that swept through Scaling Dam.
| Bookplate of Revd William Atkinson |
William matriculated in the Michaelmas term 1778. He was made a deacon in 1778 and priested in 1781. He took his B.A in 1781, his M.A in 1784, and his B.D in 1792.
These were eventful times in the outside world. In 1783, King George III was forced to accept the loss of Britain’s American colonies. In January 1788, the first convict fleet arrived in Botany Bay carrying 1,480 men, women and children. The Greenland whale fishery was in full operation, with 21 vessels leaving Whitby that season. Across the Channel, France was in the grip of runaway inflation and ever increasing economic turmoil and on 14 July 1789 the storming of the Bastille would mark the beginning of events that would shake Europe. Meanwhile, back at home in North Yorkshire, Whitby was a major centre of shipbuilding, ranking third after London and Newcastle in the early 1790s. Along the coast and the escarpment of the Cleveland Hills, men were mining alum, a valuable commodity and vital to the textile and leather industries.
| St Catharine's, Cambridge (called Catharine Hall until 1860) |
Then on 2 July 1808 William was elected Fellow of Christ's; it was the first election in the time of his friend Dr Browne's Mastership. It is all very convoluted. William Jones, in his A History of St Catharine's College, Cambridge (CUP 1936) comments that
One finds it difficult not to suspect that much of this feud was due to sheer idleness. The Fellows at St Catharine's at this period were not busy with research. They had no undergraduates, or practically none, to teach. Unmarried, they had no home interests. Satan, indeed, found work for idle hands to do
At the time of the feud, William wasn't living in College. By 1788, he was living in the village of Whaddon, a dozen miles south-west of Cambridge. By 1806 he had moved to Stapleford, about 5 miles south of Cambridge. There he lived at the Grove at the fork in the road near Sawston Bridge.
| 1888-1913 O.S. Stapleford CC-BY-NC-SA National Library of Scotland |
Apart from being Mildmay Preacher between 1816 and 1818, Christ's has no record of him holding a College office, or a benefice, or being resident in College, though he never missed a meeting until his last five years.
| Christ's College, Cambridge: Fellows' Garden, showing rear of Fellows' Building |
How did he spend his time (apart from taking part in the College feud)? He must have lectured, perhaps he had pupils and he seems, on occasion at least, to have taken duty for another clergyman. He certainly farmed. He had his library, which was a typical middle-class collection judging by the inscribed volumes that have passed down through the years – and Jane Austen would have been pleased to see that he didn't disdain novels. He had Samuel Richardson's Sir Charles Grandison. We can imagine him working away at the system of shorthand that he invented. It was a quiet life.