William J. Pringle: Reverend Luke Booker (1762–1835), LLD, Vicar of Dudley; Dudley Museums Service[1]
Orders
Ordination
by Frederick Cornwallis, Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry
Personal details
Born
(1762-10-20)20 October 1762
Nottingham, England
Died
1 October 1835(1835-10-01) (aged 72) Bower Ashton, England
Nationality
English
Denomination
Church of England
Spouse
Ann
Children
2
Occupation
Clergyman, poet, and antiquary
Rev. Luke Booker (20 October 1762 – 1 October 1835) LL.D., FRLS was an English Anglican clergyman, poet and antiquary, with a long list of published sermons and poetry. As a cleric he was strongly linked with the town of Dudley, then an exclave of Worcestershire.
Booker laid the cornerstone for Dudley's St Thomas Church on 25 October 1816.[4] He remained at Dudley until shortly before his death, having preached 173 sermons.[3] During the Regency, Booker was one of the Chaplains in Ordinary to George IV.
"... that at a time when a gloomy spirit is pervading the country, not only diminishing the stock of harmless enjoyments, but endangering a morbid taste detrimental also to elegant literature, a drama might be constructed, though not professedly of a sacred character, against which fanaticism itself should have no just cause to allege any objection." (Booker's explanation for publishing his 1831 play, The Champion of Cyrus, a drama, in five acts.)
Booker married four times.[4] One marriage was to Ann, daughter of Thomas Blakemore. Ann and Luke Booker had two children. The son, Thomas William Booker, was adopted by Blakemore, raised at Melingriffith Tin Plate Works,[9] and became MP for Herefordshire. The daughter was Harriet-Esther Booker.[10]
Booker died at Bower Ashton, England on 1 October 1835.[2][3] William J. Pringle's portrait of him is in the Dudley Museum's collection.
Political views
During his time at Dudley, Booker became involved in the controversy over political reform. In particular, he opposed the enfranchisement of Dudley both before and after the Reform Act 1832 had allowed the voters of Dudley to elect an MP for the first time in modern history.[11]
Selected works
The Highlanders, a poem, 1778
Poems on subjects sacred, moral, and entertaining, 2 vols, 1785
A Sermon, preached in the parish church of old Swinford, Worcestershire, 1788
Miscellaneous Poems, 1789
A Sermon, preached at St. Edmund's church, in Dudley; and published for the purpose of erecting a monument, 1791
Britain's Happiness; an assize sermon ... exhibiting an historical review of providential interpositions in favour of the British Empire, 1792
A Sermon preached in the parish church of St. Thomas; at Dudley ... and an address to the common people, &c. on the subject of riots, 1793
Sermons on various subjects, 1793
Malvern, a descriptive and historical poem, 1798
The Hop-Garden, a didactic poem, 1799
A Discourse, (addressed chiefly to parents) on the duty and advantages of inoculating children, 1802
Calista; or, a picture of modern life, 1803
Poems, 1803
Tobias, a poem, 1805
A Moral Review of the Conduct and Case of Mary Ashford, in refutation of the arguments adduced in defence of her supposed violator and murderer, 1818
The Foundations of a Kingdom Endangered by Iniquity, and its ruin prevented by righteousness, 1820
Euthanasia; or, the state of man after death, 1822
A Descriptive and Historical Account of Dudley Castle, and its surrounding scenery; with graphic illustrations, 1825
Tributes to the Dead, consisting of ... epitaphs, 1830