As the Vicar of Holy Trinity, Bordesley, Birmingham in 1880, Fr Enraght came to National and International prominence, when he was jailed for “conscience sake” under the Disraeli Government's Public Worship Regulation Act.
For more information on Fr Enraght’s life - his biography and the transcriptions of the two religious pamphlets he wrote while living in Portslade,
Click on this Link:-
Revd Richard Enraght Blogger website.
***Notes Concerning the Timeline of the above Revd Richard Enraght text appearing on the Internet.
The research on the Revd Richard W Enraght's life was first written in 2001 and uploaded to the Parish of St Nicolas & St Andrews Portslade’s Btinternet website. (See Internet Archive's Wayback Machine for confirmation)
In
2007, six years after the research article appeared on the 'St Nicolas &
St Andrew’s Portslade’s website' a prĂ©cis
of this
Enraght
research
was uploaded to Wikipedia to create a new Richard W Enraght Wikipedia
page, by the author of this above text (who
also transcribed all the Enraght published pamphlets on the Project
Canterbury website).
Over the years, the Wikipedia page for Richard Enraght has been
greatly edited and now differs substantially with the Enraght
biography texts on this website.
Unfortunately
in 2010, BT shut down all free of costs websites for Churches,
therefore this Enraght page moved to a new St Nicolas & St Andrew
Blogspot Parish website, again this website was shut down in 2013 and
a small section of the above Enraght page moved to the present
website of the Parish
of Portslade & Mile Oak.
In
2025 the Biography article was greatly expanded from the original
2001 with separate 'Biography pages' charting Fr Enraght's life,
writings and lectures.
See Also:-
The History of:- St Nicolas Church Portslade
The History of:- St Andrew's Church Portslade
