ARCHIBALD
KENNETH INGRAM
A BIBLIOGRAPHY
BY
BARRY VAN-ASTEN
Archibald Kenneth
Ingram was born at St George, Hanover Square, London on 7th June
1882, the only son of Archibald Brown Ingram, born in Lanarkshire, Scotland on
4th October 1850, a Chartered Accountant who lived in Staines,
London and Kate Agnes Francis born in Holloway, London in 1850, who were
married in Kingston-Upon-Thames, Surrey in 1875. At the time of young
Archibald’s birth his parents were living at Mount Ararat Road in Richmond,
Surrey with A B Ingram’s father, George Simpson Ingram (born Aberdeen, Scotland
on 30th May 1815 and dying in Richmond on 3rd October
1889) who was a Congregational Minister and A B’s stock broker brother George
John Ingram together with their cook and house maid. George Simpson Ingram was
the author of several long-winded ecclesiastical books such as – ‘Bishop
Colenso, Objections to the Historical Truth of the Pentateuch: Answered by His
Own Concessions and Admissions’ [in the Pentateuch and Book of Joshua Critically
Examined]. London.
1863, and the equally thought-provoking, ‘The Higher Ministry of Nature, or the
Bearing of Creation on the Truth and Mission of Christianity: Considered in
seven Lectures. London.
1865, or the delightfully enigmatic, ‘A Letter in Answer to the Inquiry – “Do
the Scriptures Warrant a Belief in the Wicked being finally Rescued from
Perdition and Admitted into Heaven?”’ Stirling.
1884. It would not be long before the Old Testament tincture of Mount Ararat
Road gave way to the fresh breezes of Alum Chine, Kingston Hill,
Kingston-on-Thames, Surrey where the Ingram’s and their child, Archibald
Kenneth would move to. Archibald Kenneth Ingram, he later dropped the
‘Archibald’, was educated at Charterhouse School, Godalming, Surrey, entering in
the Cricket Quarter of 1896 and boarding at the school’s Robinite House, Frith
Hill Road, and leaving in the Long Quarter of 1899, the same year his father,
Archibald Brown Ingram died in Llanfyllin, Montgomeryshire, Wales on 26th
January 1899 [he was buried at Llanrhaiadr-ym-Mochnant, Denbigshire on 31st
January]. Life at Alum Chine continued and for some years Kenneth’s Aunt Fanny
– Fanny Elizabeth Francis, born in London in 1846, [she died age 86 in Epsom,
Surrey on 29th April 1933] has been living with them. In 1903 he
organised a ‘Readers Club for Boys’ and meetings were at 8 p.m. and held at St Alban’s House [The Surry
Comet. Wednesday 14th
October 1903. p. 8]. The following year, 1904, Kenneth, who is a
member of the St Alban’s Debating Society, meeting at St Alban’s Clubhouse
[Chiswick Times. Friday 21st
October 1904. p. 3] is employed as a Journalist, on the staff of
The Church Times & The Treasury magazine. Ingram begins writing books on
various subjects of historical, educational, theological and sociological
concerns, influenced by the religious philosophy of the Scottish author and
sociologist, John Macmurray (1891-1976); he became Assistant Secretary of the Kingston branch of the
E.C.U. [English Church Union] whose headquarters were 35 Wellington Street, the Stand, London. He is called to
the Bar and studies Law at Inner Temple, London, becoming a Barrister-at-Law from November 1909; (in 1911 he
is listed in the census as ‘assistant secretary Barrister-at-Law’ and his address
is: 7, Figtree Court, Temple); He became Assistant Secretary of the English
Church Union and also a Scoutmaster, 1st Surrey, (Kingston Hill) ‘Mr
Kenneth Ingram of Alum Chine, Kingston Hill as Scout Master’ [The Boy Scouts.
The Surrey Comet. Wednesday 1st December 1909. p. 4
(also the following year in April 1910
Ingram was with his troop, 1st Surrey, rehearsing in Richmond Park
on Saturday 23rd April for the Royal Review at Windsor in June but
it was unfortunately postponed due to King Edward’s death. Boy Scouts. The Richmond Herald. Saturday 30th April 1910.
p. 6]; Ingram was also involved with the Scouts up to the war, mentioned in the
Surrey Advertiser and County Times under ‘Boy Scouts and the War’ [Saturday 25th
November 1916. p. 6] as being ‘scoutmaster, 1st Surrey’ who along
with other scoutmasters ‘held ‘commissions in H. M. Army’. He entered service
in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve (RNVR) as an Able Seaman (service number:
AA1350) during the First World War; he was stationed at the Royal Garrison
Artillery, London Division of the Anti-Aircraft Corps and after entering
service in August 1915, he served three years active service in France with an
anti-aircraft battery in the line and he attained the rank of Lieutenant.
Following the war he was Secretary of the Grants Committee, Appointments
Department at the British Ministry of Labour, 1919-1923; he was a member of the
House of Laity of the Church Assembly and wrote for the Anglo-Catholic
Chronicle and was founder and Editor of the ‘Green Quarterly’ magazine (Society
of SS. Peter & Paul, Westminster House, London in 1924); editor of the
Police Journal (established 1928 and published by Philip Allan & Co.
London) and Director of Quality Press, London (April 1944). He was a keen
enthusiast of dramatic arts and often talked on the subject, particularly from
a religious standpoint [he contributed his piece on ‘Religious Drama’ to The
Churchman’s Handbook of 1936. London.
The Church Assembly. 1935] – on Friday 1st November 1929 he attended
(along with fellow author Hugh Walpole and Headmaster’s from several public
schools) an all schoolboy amateur production of George Bernard Shaw’s ‘St.
Joan’ by Worksop College Dramatic Society produced by the Headmaster, Rev. F J
Shirley (who also played Bishop Beauvais); the angelic St. Joan was played by
16 year old J W B Wilkinson whose beauty won the hearts of many that night. Ingram
was fond of joining and forming clubs and societies and was a member of the
Christian Evidence Society and of the Reform Club; he was a founder member of the
British Society for the Study of Sex Psychology (BSSSP) along with George Cecil
Ives; founding member of the Temple Bar Club, established 1930, which met once
a month to discuss modern ideas on religious thought and philosophical notions and
founding member of The Grecian Club, also established in 1930, which met every
third Tuesday in the month to discuss religious and philosophical matters, the
first meeting occurring on 17th October 1930 at Prince Henry’s Room,
Fleet Street and subsequent meetings were held at the Cheshire Cheese public
house, Fleet Street; the club was still active in the 1960’s. Ingram was well
known for his charismatic public speaking and lectures throughout his career
(see section: Ingram as Speaker) and was a Speaker on Foreign Affairs for the
Common Wealth National Committee; he was also Vice-Chairman of the National
Peace Council. During the 1940’s he became involved with the ‘Unser Kampf’
movement formed by Sir Richard Acland (1906-1990), a fellow Inner Temple
barrister and one of the founders of the British Common Wealth party of 1942. In
July 1952 he was invited to Moscow
by the Soviet Government as part of a delegation of 14 Christians representing
‘members of various organisations and individuals, with a personal concern for
maintaining peace and improving relations between the British and Soviet
peoples.’ The plane left London Airport on Saturday 5th July with
only 12 of the original 14 delegates onboard travelling to Prague on the way to
Moscow for their three week ‘peace’ visit; Kenneth Ingram is listed as
‘barrister’ and along with what seems a rather ineffectual bunch of delegates
numbering the likes of: Mr. A MacDougall (chairman of the Amalgamated Union of
Foundry Workers), Rev. Clifford Macquire (Fellowship of Reconciliation), Mr.
John Horner (general secretary of the Fire Brigade Union), Mrs. Margaret Harvey
(J. P. of Letchworth) and Mr Peter Marsh (seed grower) I’m not sure what use
the delegation actually was or what good came of it. [Nottingham
Evening Post. Saturday 5th
July 1952. front page]. He corresponded with several distinguished
people in relation to his Christian philosophy, such as the social researcher,
Richard Morris Titmuss (1907-1973); George Kennedy Allen Bell, (1883-1958),
Bishop of Chichester (1929) who wrote an excellent biography of Archibishop
Randall Davidson (1935); Hugh Richard Heathcote Gascoyne-Cecil (1869-1956), 1st
Baron Quickswood, politician and fellow member of the House of Laity in the
Church Assembly, and Rev. John Albert Douglas (1868-1956), founder of the
Nikaean Club (1926) who corresponded on the English Church Union and the
Anglo-catholic Congress. Kenneth Ingram, who
was living at Delves House, 31 Queen’s Gate Terrace, London, SW 7, died aged 82 on 28th June 1965
at the Royal London Homeopathic
Hospital [Kensington News
and West London Times. Friday
9th July 1965. p. 9]
WORKS PUBLISHED:
A Short History of the
Parish of Teddington. Archibald K. Ingram. Teddington. T W Childs. 1909. Booklet.
pp. 24 with 3 pp. plate illustrations.
The Greater Triumph: A
Story of Osborne and Dartmouth.
Archibald K. Ingram.(with 7 illustrations by Donald Maxwell).London. A R
Mowbray & Co. 1911. 8vo. pp. 222.
Boys: What they are
and how to manage them. (With a Preface by Lt. Gen. Sir R S S Baden Powell). Archibald
K. Ingram.London. A R Mowbray. 1911. 16mo. pp. 28.
Basil Verely: A Study
in Charterhouse Life. Archibald K. Ingram. (with 8 black & white full page illustrations
and coloured frontispiece by F. E. Hiley and H. L. Bacon). London. George Allen & Co. 1912. Cloth.
Crown 8vo. pp. 318.
A Manual for Church of
England Scouts, etc. Archibald K. Ingram. London.
A R Mowbray. 1913. 8vo. xv pp. 94.
Is Divorce Needed? Kenneth
Ingram. London.
Wells Gardner & Co. 1914. 8vo. pp. 95.
The Faded Vision. Kenneth
Ingram. (novel). London.
John Murray. 1915. 8vo. pp. 362.
An Outline of Sexual
Morality. Kenneth Ingram. (Introduction by F W W Griffin).
London. Jonathan Cape. 1922. 8vo. pp. 93.
The Sun-Worshipper. Kenneth
Ingram. (novel). London.
J M Ouseley & Sons Ltd. 1923. 8vo. pp. 270. The novel was reviewed in The
Irish Monthly. Volume 51, number 603. September 1923. pp. 477.
The Window. Kenneth
Ingram. (novel). London.
J M Ouseley & Sons Ltd. 1923. Light blue cloth cover, dark blue decoration
and lettering. 8vo. pp. 61. Rare.
The Adventure of
Passiontide. Kenneth Ingram. London.
Society of SS. Peter & Paul. 1923. 8vo. pp. 64.
The Romance of
Christmas. Kenneth Ingram. London.
Society of SS. Peter & Paul. 1923. Grey card cover. 8vo. pp. 68.
The Anglo-Catholic
Case: An Argument from the Logical and Practical Standpoint. Kenneth Ingram. London. Society of SS.
Peter & Paul. 1923. 8vo. pp. 80.
The Symbolic Island. Kenneth Ingram. (novel). London. The Damian Press. 1924. pp. 233. The
novel was reviewed in The Crusader, volume 6, 1924. p. 9 and The New Statesman,
volume 23, 1924. p. 358.
England at the Flood Tide. Kenneth Ingram. London. The Damian Press.
1924. 8vo. pp. 220.
The Pilgrimage of Mass. Kenneth Ingram. London. Society of SS.
Peter & Paul. 1924. 8vo. pp. 55.
The Romance of the
Fiery Cross. Kenneth Ingram. London.
Society of SS. Peter & Paul. 1924. 8vo. pp. 32.
This – to Explain. Kenneth
Ingram. London.
Society of SS. Peter & Paul. 1924. Sewn paperback. 8vo. pp. 51.
The Changing Order;
and How a New Parson Came to the Village and Disquieted it with Strange
Practices, and How the Meaning of Anglo-Catholicism was Expounded to the Squire.
Kenneth Ingram. London.
Philip Allan & Co. 1925. 8vo. vii pp. 183.
The Man Who Was
Lonely. Kenneth Ingram. (novel). London.
The Damian Press.1925. 8vo. vi pp. 254. The novel was reviewed in G. K.’s
Weekly. 9th
January 1926. p. 437 and The Saturday Review of Politics,
Literature, Science, Art and Finance. 2nd January 1926. p. 15.
The Mystery of the
Three Hours. (A New Meditation of the Passion). Kenneth Ingram. London. Society of SS.
Peter & Paul. 1925. Black cloth cover. 8vo. pp. 95. Rare. Reviewed in The
Crusader, volume 7, 1925. p. 199 and The Month, volume 147. p. 282.
The Social Teaching of
the Mass.
Kenneth Ingram. London.
Catholic Literature Association. Society of SS. Peter & Paul. [number 7 in
the Anglo-Catholic Congress Books series] 1925. Small stapled paper cover. pp.
16.
A Portrait of Six
Christian Heroes: St Appian, St Alban, St Athansius, St Francis De Sales, St
Ignatius Loyola, George Elton Sedding. Kenneth Ingram. London. Society of SS. Peter & Paul.
1926. 8vo. vi pp. 103.
The Effect of Regular
Confession. (Reprinted with emendations from “This – to Explain”). Kenneth
Ingram. London.
Catholic Literature Association. 1926. 8vo. pp. 8.
Why I Believe. Kenneth
Ingram. London.
Society of SS. Peter & Paul. 1927. Red cloth boards. 8vo. vii pp. 183.
Report of the
Anglo-Catholic Congress. ed. Kenneth Ingram and Charles Scott Gillett. London. Society of SS.
Peter & Paul. 1927. pp. 238.
How to Spend Holy
Week. A Simple Guide to the Ceremonies. Kenneth Ingram. London. Catholic Literature Association.
1927. 12mo. pp. 11.
Out of Darkness: A
Drama of Flanders. Kenneth Ingram. London. Chatto &
Windus. 1927. Red cloth cover, gilt lettering. 8vo. pp. 312. Reviewed by Edwin
Muir in The Nation & Athenaeum. 7th May 1927. p. 154 and The Bookman, volume
67, 1928. p. xvi.
The Unreasonable of
Anti-Christianity. A Reply to “Why I am Not a Christian”, by Mr. Bernard
Russell. Kenneth Ingram. London.
Society of SS. Peter & Paul. 1928. 8vo. pp. 31.
Has the Church Failed?
Kenneth Ingram. London.
Philip Allan & Co. 1929. 8vo. pp. 222.
Sunday. Kenneth
Ingram. London.
Philip Allan & Co. 1929. [Publications of the Guild of St Francis of Sales
series number 3]. 8vo. pp. 32.
The Sunday Mass and
the Industrial Problem, etc. Kenneth Ingram. London. Society of SS. Peter & Paul.
1929. 8vo. pp. 23.
The Road to Easter. Kenneth
Ingram. London.
Society of SS. Peter & Paul.1930. 12mo. pp. 96.
A Modern Attitude to
the Sex Problem. Kenneth Ingram. London.
George Allen & Unwin. 1930. 8vo. pp. 158.
Report of the
Anglo-Catholic Congress. ed. Kenneth Ingram and F Leslie Cross. London. Society of SS.
Peter & Paul. 1930. Orange cloth boards, black lettering front and spine.
pp. 213.
The Steep Steps. A
Detective Story. Kenneth Ingram. (novel). London.
Philip Allan.1931. Red cloth cover with black line decoration. 8vo. vii pp.
319.
The Church of Tomorrow.
Kenneth Ingram. London.
Philip Allan & Co. 1931. 8vo. pp. 239.
Youth Looks at
Religion. (Essays by Various Authors, [Christopher Casson, Peter Winckworth,
Pamela Frankau, Susan Lowndes, E L B Hankin, Giles Playfair and W A Fearnley
Whittingstall] with a Reply by the Archbishop of York), ed. Kenneth Ingram. London. Philip Allan. 1932. 8vo. pp. 166.
Midsummer Sanity.
Kenneth Ingram. (novel). London.
Philip Allan. 1933. 8vo. pp. 295. Reviewed in Time and Tide. John O’ London’s, volume 15,
issue 1-26, 1934. p. 152.
Death Comes at Night. Kenneth
Ingram. (novel). London.
Philip Allan. 1933. 8vo. v pp. 308.
Modern Thought on
Trial. Kenneth Ingram. London.
Philip Allan. 1933. 8vo. viii pp. 245.
John Keble. Kenneth
Ingram. London.
Philip Allan. 1933. [Tractarian series].
8vo. pp. 184.
A Lay Devotion. Kenneth
Ingram. London.
Philip Allan. 1934. 8vo. pp. 88.
Is There a Future
Life? Kenneth Ingram. London.
Catholic Literature Association. 1934. 8vo. pp. 6.
The Coming
Civilization: Will it be Capitalist? Will it be Materialist? Kenneth Ingram. London. George Allen
& Unwin. 1935. Green cloth cover. 8vo. pp. 209.
It Is Expedient. Kenneth
Ingram. (novel). London.
Geoffrey Bles. 1935. Blue cloth cover. 8vo. pp. 297.
The Union Society of London: The First Hundred
Years. ed. Kenneth Ingram and Alun Llewellyn. London. Union Society of London. 1935. 8vo. pp.
78.
Basil Jellicoe. Kenneth
Ingram. (with portraits). London. The Centenary Press. 1936. Black cloth cover.
8vo. ix pp. 182.
Christianity: Right or
Left? Which Way Will Religion Move in the World Crisis? Kenneth Ingram. London. George Allen
& Unwin. 1937. Red cloth boards. 8vo. pp. 207.
And He Shall Come
Again. Kenneth Ingram. London.
William Heinemann. 1938. [‘I Believe’ series, number 4]. 8vo. viii pp. 175.
The Ambart Trial. Kenneth
Ingram. (novel). London.
Quality Press Ltd. 1938. 8vo. pp. 437.
The Christian
Challenge to Christians. Kenneth Ingram. London.
George Allen & Unwin. 1938. 8vo. pp. 223.
The Defeat of War: Can
Pacifism Achieve It? Kenneth Ingram. London.
George Allen & Unwin. 1939. Black cloth boards, silver lettering front and
spine. 8vo. pp. 134.
Towards Christianity –
The Religious Progress of the World. Kenneth Ingram. London. Student Christian Movement Press.
1939. 8vo. pp. 216.
Will Britain go
Fascist? Kenneth Ingram. London.
Christian Left (pamphlet, number 2) card cover, stapled paper. 1939. 8vo. pp.
11.
Sex Morality Tomorrow.
Kenneth Ingram. London.
George Allen & Unwin. 1940. 8vo. pp. 175.
The Night is Far
Spent. Kenneth Ingram. (novel) London.
George Allen & Unwin. 1941. Blue cloth cover with white lettering on the
spine. 8vo. pp. 125. Reviewed in the London Quarterly Review, volume 167, 1942.
p. 121.
Malvern, 1941: The
Life of the Church and the Order of Society, Being the Proceedings of the
Archbishop of York’s Conference. Introduction by Archbishop William Temple. London. Longmans, Green
& Co. 1941. Contributors: T S Eliot [‘The Christian Concept of Education’],
Dorothy L Sayers [‘The Church’s Responsibility’] William Temple, John Middleton
Murray, B Causton, W G Peck, M B Reckitt, D M Mackinnon, V A Demant, Sir
Richard Ackland [‘Practical Questions I’] and Kenneth Ingram [‘Practical
Questions II’]. 8vo. xv pp. 235.
A Christian Basis for
the Post-War World. A Commentary on the Ten Peace Points. Ed. A E Baker, (with
contributions by: Kenneth Ingram, Margaret Bondfield, A D Lindsay, Sidney Dark,
Dorothy L Sayers, Letitia Fairfield, R R Stokes, John A Hughes, Barbara Ward
and the Archbishop of Canterbury), Preface by the Bishop of Carlisle. London. Student Christian
Movement Press. 1942. [Chapter III: ‘International Organisation’ by Kenneth
Ingram. pp. 37-44]
Taken at the Flood. Kenneth
Ingram. London.
George Allen & Unwin. 1943. Blue boards. 8vo. pp. 139. Reviewed in the
International Affairs Review Supplement. Volume 19, number 12. June 1943. pp.
629.
Return of Yesterday. Kenneth
Ingram. (novel). London.
Quality Press Ltd. 1943. 8vo. pp. 220.
The Premier Tell the
Truth. Kenneth Ingram. London.
Quality Press. 1944. Red cloth cover. 8vo. pp. 164. Italian translation: ‘El
“Premier” dice la verdad’. Alban. 1946. pp. 197.
Christianity and
Sexual Morality – A Modernist View. Kenneth Ingram. London. Union
of Modern Free Churchmen. 1944. 8vo. pp. 22.
Religion and the New
Society. Kenneth Ingram. London.
C W Publishing. 1944. (Common Wealth Popular Library series). 8vo. pp. 15.
Guide to the New Age:
A Political Guide for a Young Soldier and his Girl. Kenneth Ingram. London. George Allen
& Unwin. 1945. 8vo. pp. 192.
Years of Crisis: An
Outline of International History 1919-1945. Kenneth Ingram. London. George Allen & Unwin. 1946.
Orange cloth boards, black lettering front and spine. 8vo. pp. 487. Italian
translation: ‘Anni di Crisi’. Milano, Longanesi. 1948. 8vo. pp. 574.
Communist Challenge:
Good or Evil. Kenneth Ingram. London.
Quality Press. 1948. Orange cloth boards, black lettering front and spine. 8vo.
pp. 147.
Two Worlds in Focus:
Studies of the Cold War. London.
National Peace Council (Great
Britain). Commission on East-West Relations.
1950. Ingram contributed an article: ‘Can the Two Worlds Co-Operate?’ in
chapter III, p. 61. 8vo. xi pp. 133.
Christianity,
Communism and Society. Kenneth Ingram. New
York. Rider. 1951. 8vo. pp. 216.
Negotiation Not
Appeasement. Kenneth Ingram. London.
National Peace Council. 1951. [Peace Aims Pamphlet series number 51]. 8vo. pp.
6.
Easter Journey. Kenneth
Ingram. London.
Longmans Green. 1953. 8vo. ix pp. 109.
Storm in a Sanctuary. Kenneth
Ingram. (novel). London.
Ernest Benn. 1954. 8vo. pp. 224.
Return to Reality:
Some Essays on Contemporary Christianity (various authors), Edited by S G Evans
[Stanley George Evans]. London.
Zeno. 1954. Contributions by: John Putterill, John Lewis, Thomas Williams MP,
Edward Charles, John Tunnicliffe, the Dean of Canterbury and Kenneth Ingram who
contributes his essay: ‘The Church and Social Thinking’. 8vo. pp. 300.
History of the Cold
War. Kenneth Ingram. London. Darwen Finlayson. 1955. 8vo. pp. 239. [Ingram also
wrote an undated paper entitled: ‘Atomic and Nuclear Weapons’ (circa 1954-56)
which was read at meetings].
Fifty Years of the
National Peace Council. Kenneth Ingram. London.
National Peace Council. 1958. 8vo. pp. 27.
Is Christianity
Credible? A Plain Guide for Intelligent Inquirers. Kenneth Ingram. London. The Faith Press.
1963. Paperback. 8vo. pp. 163. Originally: ‘Faith and Skepticism [sic] Today’
in the original undated typescript with holograph corrections, circa 1963 and
published as ‘Is Christianity Credible?’ (1963).
Kenneth Ingram
provided an Introductory Note to ‘A Garden of Song’ edited by Gabriel Gillett.
The Society of SS. Peter & Paul. Westminster,
London. 1923.
folio. pp. 24.
Towards Old Age. Kate
Agnes Ingram [Kenneth Ingram’s mother who was 83 years old], With a Memoir of
the Author by Her Son Kenneth Ingram (with a portrait). London. Quality Press Ltd. 1945. 8vo. pp. 70.
Works submitted to
George Allen & Unwin for approval of publication [Records of George Allen
& Unwin Ltd. Correspondence file. University of Reading:
Special Collections]:
Credo. 1920. Reader’s
Report read by Bernard Miall.
Indian Summer. 1941.
Reader’s Report read by Bernard Miall.
Easter Eve. 1942.
Reader’s Report read by Eric Fenn.
Supreme Adventure.
1942. Reader’s Report read by Eric Fenn.
Way to the New World. 1944. Reader’s Report read by H J Stenning.
Political Guide in
World Confusion. 1949. Reader’s Report read by Malcolm Barnes.
Religious Guide in
this World. 1950. Reader’s Report read by Edward Lewis.
Possibilities of a
Religious Revival. 1953. Reader’s report read by Richard Horton.
SHORT STORIES:
Contributions to the
Philip Allan 14 volume series of ‘creeps’ which began in 1932:
Reprieve by Kenneth
Ingram. Panics: A Collection of Uneasy Tales (12 tales). London. Philip Allan. 1934. p. 225. 8vo. pp.
241.
The Locum by Kenneth
Ingram. Monsters: A Collection of Uneasy Tales (12 tales). London. Philip Allan. 1934. p. 219. 8vo. pp.
249.
The Confession by
Kenneth Ingram. ibid. p. 51.
The Third Time by
Kenneth Ingram. Powers of Darkness: A Collection of Uneasy Tales (10 tales). London. Philip Allan.
1934. p. 69. 8vo. pp. 243.
Passing of the Terror
by Kenneth Ingram. Thrills: A Collection of Uneasy Tales (14 tales). London. Philip Allan.
1935. p. 217. 8vo. pp. 249.
The False Trail by
Kenneth Ingram. Tales of Dread: A Collection of Uneasy Tales (9 tales). London. Philip Allan.
1936. p. 223. 8vo. pp. 248.
Allegory by Kenneth
Ingram. The Quorum: A Magazine of Friendship. Volume 1, number 1 (only
published issue). The Editorial Committee. London. 1920. pp. 24-27.
Class Hatred by
Kenneth Ingram. ibid. pp. 28-33. [see facsimile edition with an introduction by
Timothy d’Arch Smith. Asphodel Editions (150 numbered copies). 2001.
ARTICLES IN VARIOUS
PERIODICALS:
Legitimism as a
Practical Policy by Kenneth Ingram. The Jacobite magazine. March 1903.
Russia in the Wrong by Kenneth Ingram. Occasional
Papers monthly magazine. May 1904.
Spiritual Healing by
Kenneth Ingram. ibid. June 1904.
In the Stalls by
Kenneth Ingram (article on theatrical criticism). ibid.
The Dawn of the Yellow
Peril by Kenneth Ingram. ibid. December 1904.
Dramatic Criticism by
Kenneth Ingram. ibid. June 1905.
On the Coast of Artois – If the Tunnel
were Built by Kenneth Ingram. The Treasury monthly magazine. March 1907.
The Christmas of the
Cattle by Kenneth Ingram. ibid. December 1909.
The Charterhouse Mission in Southwark by
Kenneth Ingram. ibid. October 1910.
Cinemas at the Front –
Tommy Welcomes Battle Pictures (article) by Lieutenant Kenneth Ingram. Cambridge Daily News. Tuesday 3rd September 1918.
p. 4. [also other newspapers]
A Morning Cup of Tea
by Lieutenant Kenneth Ingram [War Sketches]. War Supplement, week ending 28th September 1918.
Chichester Observer. Wednesday 25th September 1918.
p. 6. [also other newspapers]
The Author Must Be An
Editor by Kenneth Ingram. The Editor: The Journal of Information for Literary
Workers – A Weekly Service for Authors. Volume 79-82. 28 April 1928. Ed. William R Kane;
published by: William R Kane, R C Smith & A N Kane. Book Hill, Highland Falls, New
York. pp 68-69.
The Future of the
Catholic Movement: Towards a Settlement by Kenneth Ingram. Green Quarterly.
June 1928.
Religious Drama by
Kenneth Ingram. The Churchman’s Handbook 1936: Everyman’s Guide to the Church
of England. London.
The Church Assembly. 1935.
Outside the Kremlin
Windows by Kenneth Ingram. Fellowship magazine, volume 19, issue 2. New York. February 1953.
pp. 14-20.
REVIEWS IN THE
CRITERION:
Kenneth Ingram’s
review of Ronald Knox: Caliban in Grub Street by G Lowes Dickinson and others.
The Criterion 1922-1939 in 18 volumes, ed by T S Eliot. Volume IX October
1929-July 1930. London.
Faber & Faber. 1967. Volume IX, number 37, July 1930. pp. 757-759.
Martin Luther: A
Destiny by Lucien Febvre. The Criterion 1922-1939 in 18 volumes, ed by T S
Eliot. Volume X October 1930-July 1931. London.
Faber & Faber. 1967. Volume X, number 39, January 1931. pp. 336-337.
Pascal by Jacques
Chevalier. Ibid.
Social Control of Sex
Expression by Geoffrey May. Ibid. Volume X, number 40, April 1931. pp. 541-542.
Kenneth Ingram’s
Christianity: Right or Left was reviewed by George Every in The Criterion.
Volume XVI October 1936-July 1937. Volume XVI, number 65, July 1937. pp.
711-713.
Ingram’s review of the
Drift of Civilization by C G Abbot. George Allen & Unwin. 1930 was
submitted to the Criterion but not accepted.
INGRAM AS SPEAKER –
Some Subjects and Occasions:
Prior to the First
World War Ingram spoke on various subjects concerning religious issues from ‘Voluntary
Discipline’ (March 1905), ‘Religion and Morality’ read to the Chiswick branch
of the E.C.U. [English Church Union] on Wednesday 25th October 1905,
‘What is Catholic?’ (April 1907), ‘Present Difficulties’ and ‘The Proposed
Revision of the Prayer Book’; ‘Dangers Ahead’ [part 1: Dangers Within, part 2:
Dangers Without], ‘Present and Future Dangers’ (changes to the Marriage Law),
(September 1907), ‘On the Outlook for Church People’ (May 1908), ‘Some
Consequences of the Reformation Settlement’ (June 1909), ‘The Athanasian Creed’
(October 1909), ‘Divorce and Facilities for Divorce’ (August 1910), ‘the Church’s
Law on Holy Matrimony’ (November 1910), ‘the Revision of the Prayer Book’ (May
1911), ‘the Reformation Settlement’ (October 1911) and ‘the State of the Holy
Communion’ (November 1912), ‘The State and Admission to Holy Communion’
(October 1913), ‘Relations Between Church and State’ (April 1914):
‘What does Catholic
Mean?’ E.C.U. Reading Branch. Phillip’s Restaurant, 9 Duke Street, Reading.
Monday 28th January 1907. 8
p.m.
‘Catholic Duties – To
His Home, To His Fellow Men, To His Country’. E.C.U. Reading Branch. Phillip’s
Restaurant, 9 Duke Street,
Reading. Tuesday 29th
January 1907. 8 p.m.
‘How To Reach The
Average Man – the Catholic Faith from the Practical Point of View’. E.C.U.
Reading Branch. Phillip’s Restaurant, 9
Duke Street, Reading.
Tuesday 16th April 1907.
‘The Education Bill’.
E.C.U. All Saint’s Hall, Lower Sydenham.
December 1908.
‘Catholicism from a
Practical Point of View’. E.C.U. Barnes branch. Cleveland Hall, Barnes. Tuesday 17th March 1908.
‘Catholics and Holy
Communion’. E.C.U. Winchester. Thursday
25th February 1909.
‘Reformation
Settlement’. Thatched Assembly Rooms, Norwich.
Friday 4th
February 1910.
‘The Work of the
E.C.U.’ and ‘Marriage Law’. Falkland Hall, Burford, Oxfordshire. 12th December 1912.
Following the war he was
very active in his speaking work giving talks on – ‘the Church and Divorce’
[after his article in The Fiery Cram] (April 1926), ‘Man’s Personal Life’
(November 1926), ‘What is Anglo-Catholicism?’ (June 1928), ‘The Future of the
Catholic Movement’ [after his article of the same name appearing in the Green
Quarterly] (October 1928):
‘The War and its
Lessons’ (lecture) at the Theosophical Society, Church Road, Tunbridge Wells on
Monday 6th March 1922.
‘The Influence of
Democracy on Religion’ at York House, Cheriton Gardens, Canterbury for the
Annual Festival, English Church Union on Thursday 17th June 1926.
‘The Catholic Faith in
Daily Life’ at St Mary’s Hall, Coventry
(with fellow novelist and speaker Miss Sheila Kaye-Smith) on Tuesday 31st January 1928.
Throughout the 1930’s
he is in demand at many philosophical, sociological and religious-based events
for lectures and discussions, some subjects were: ‘the Rally to Religion’
(February 1937), ‘the Church
of Tomorrow (Answers to
Listener’s Questions)’ (1937)
‘Modern Moral
Standards’ at the Market Hall, Redhill, Surrey on Thursday 10th
March 1932 at 8 p.m.
‘The Censorship’ at
Moot Hall Chambers, Wheeler-Gate, Nottingham
in October 1932.
Ingram ‘preached’ at St Martin’s Parish
Church, Bryanston, Dorset on Sunday 20th November 1932 at 11 a.m.
‘Will Religion Survive
in the Present Age?’ a monthly lecture for men at Coventry Cathedral’s
Journalist’s Service on Sunday
5th February 1933.
‘The Church and its
Future’ at the Church Room, Oxted on Thursday 8th June 1933. [the previous day,
Wednesday 7th June, he gave a talk at a meeting in the Public
Library, Bromley].
The talk was on modern
drama as he spoke alongside Dame Sybil Thorndike at the Coventry Repertory Circle on Sunday 15th October 1933.
‘Can we be Materialists?’
(in a series of Sunday Afternoon Talks which began on 2nd June 1935)
in a Short Religious Service for Young People at John Smith’s Square, London on
Sunday 14th July 1935. In June 1935 Ingram gave a talk on the same
subject during a national radio broadcast on Sunday 2nd June 1935 from 5.10-5.30 p.m.
‘The International
Situation’ at the Free Church in Bradford in
September 1936.
‘The Christian Answer
to Fascism’ at the Adult
School, Friend’s Meeting
House, Foregate Street,
Leicester on Saturday 18th/Sunday 19th September 1938.
‘Christianity and the
Crisis’ (Ingram gave the weekly midday
Lenten Address at the United Kingdom Provident Institution Dinner) for the New
Commonwealth Society at Birmingham Cathedral on Wednesday 8th March 1939.
In May 1939 there was
a series of week-long talks on ‘Christian Sociology’ from 8th-12th
May at the School for Clergy, St Cuthbert’s Retreat House, in Gateshead,
Newcastle.
Subjects for talks
during the 40’s were: ‘the Answer to Nazism’ (December 1940), ‘Common
Ownership’ (October 1941), ‘the Forward March movement’ (May 1942), ‘Post-War
Construction’ (January 1944), ‘Religion and the New Society’ (February 1945).
‘The Meaning of World
Struggles’ (Unser Kampf Movement in collaboration with Sir Richard Acland) for
the Chester Christian Action Group at the Cathedral parlour on Monday 16th
June 1941.
‘The Issues at Stake
Today’ (Unser Kampf Movement in collaboration with Sir Richard Acland), the
Chester Forum held at Queen’s Street
Church, Chester on Sunday 22nd June 1941.
‘Common Wealth and the
Fascist Challenge to Democracy’ at the Co-Operative Assembly Room, Derby on Monday 1st May 1944.
He also spoke the following month during a Common Wealth meeting at the Labour
Hall, Minster Street,
Reading on Wednesday 21st June 1944.
During the 1950’s his
talk was mostly concerned with ‘Christianity and Communism’, his subject at the
Sydenham Friend’s Meeting House on Saturday 9th June 1951 and in
July 1952 he travelled to the USSR as part of twelve members of a Christian
delegation; following his visit he gave a series of talks on ‘Anglo-Soviet
Relations’ and spoke at the Court Room, Town Hall, Worthing, Sussex on Thursday
13th November 1952 at 7.15 p.m. on this topic.
SOME BOOKS OF INTEREST
CONCERNING KENNETH INGRAM:
The Letters of T S
Eliot. Volume 5: 1930-1931. ed. John Haffenden & Valerie Eliot. London. Faber &
Faber. 2014.
Eliot After the Waste Land.
(2nd volume of biography) Robert Crawford. Jonathan Cape.
2022.
Return to Reality:
Some Essays on Contemporary Christianity. Ed. Rev. Stanley G Evans. London. Zeno. 1954. pp.
300. [contains Ingram’s essay ‘The Church and Social Thinking’ (1954), p. 192]
Socialism and
Religion: Roads to Common Wealth. Vincent Geoghegan. Taylor & Francis.
2012. [chapter 2: Kenneth Ingram – The Christian and the Sexual: homosexuality,
bisexuality, pederasty. p. 53]
Love in Earnest: Some
Notes on the Lives and Writings of English ‘Uranian’ Poets from 1889-1930.
Timothy d’Arch Smith. London.
Routledge & Kegan Paul. 1970.
The Quorum: A Magazine
of Friendship. Facsimile edition of the first and only volume published in 1920
with an introduction by Timothy d’Arch Smith. Asphodel Editions (150 numbered
copies). 2001.
Maurice B Reckitt: A
Life. John Stuart Peart-Binns. Bowerdean. 1988. (see pp. 140-141).
The Armchair
Detective. (quarterly journal).Volume 7. New
York. Mysterious Press. 1973. p. 76.
William Temple:
Twentieth Century Christian. Joseph F Fletcher. New York. Seabury Press. 1963.
George Bell, Bishop of
Chichester. Ronald Claude Dudley Jasper. Oxford University
Press. 1967.
The Forward March. Sir
Richard Acland. London.
George Allan & Unwin Ltd. 1941.
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