William Henry Mudie


Rev. William Henry Mudie was an Anglican priest and educator in Adelaide, South Australia.

Early years

Mudie was born at Chesterfield in Derbyshire where he married Mercy Anne Caterer shortly before leaving for South Australia on the Coromandel, the couple arriving at Port Adelaide on 8 January 1855.
His father, the Rev G. D. Mudie, of Rochford, Essex and his wife Wedderburn Mudie also arrived in Adelaide in 1855. He worked as chaplain at the Yatala stockade, then as minister at the Salisbury Congregational Church.
His sister Marina, who also arrived in 1855, was married to Thomas Caterer, brother of his wife Mercy Anne. Thomas had arrived in Adelaide the previous year, and was established as a schoolteacher. She was a learned and accomplished woman, had been secretary to Elihu Burritt for some years, and worked closely with Thomas in teaching and school management.
His brother, Charles Mayelston Mudie JP. married Harriet Logie Foulis. He was a medical practitioner in Riverton from 1863 to 1866, Port Adelaide, then Stockport, South Australia from 1867 to 1868, when he was declared insolvent. then Port Pirie.

Teaching

Within a fortnight Mudie had opened a school at Magill. This school was subsequently held at the Glen Osmond Institute from 1861, at "Vansittarts", Beaumont then Tower House, Beaumont and "Urrbrae". Mercy Anne's brother Thomas taught for a time for Mudie; both he and his brother Frederick founded schools of some importance in the early history of South Australia.

Anglican Church

Around 1860 he was approached by Bishop Short,, with the result that in 1865 he was ordained as deacon, then in 1868 priest of St Saviour's Church, Glen Osmond, where he was to remain until retiring in 1897 due to ill-health.
Mudie was also deacon of St. Luke's Anglican Church in Whitmore Square from 1865 to 1895. For four years he held weekly services at the Home for Incurables at Fullarton, and from 1883 to 1897 held monthly services at the Parkside Lunatic Asylum. He was on the building committee for St. Augustine's Church on Unley Road, Unley, and for a time its rector.

Other activities

To supplement his stipend, he continued his schoolmasterly activities. From 1876 to 1883, when he moved, he conducted classes at "Woodside House", a 15-room home on irrigated on Fullarton Road, Upper Mitcham. This property was owned by the widow of George Hall, M.L.C. and later part of Peter Waite's "Urrbrae".
He was for several years President of the Glen Osmond Institute and inaugural Vice-president of the Unley Institute in 1883.
His last years were blighted by illness and he died of bronchitis and paralysis. Remarkable for a man of his abilities was his lack of ambition – he never sought higher office and served in the same diocese for over thirty years.

Family

Their family included:
Note that "Mayelston" is frequently reported as "Mayleston", "Maylestone" or "Mayelstone".