William Downes Willis


William Downes Willis was a British clergyman, theologian, and author on religious subjects.
Willis was the son of William Willis and Mary, daughter of landowner Robert Hamilton Smyth, of Lismore, Co. Down, of the family of the Viscounts Strangford. He was born at Dublin, where his father, an Army Captain, was then stationed. His middle name came from his paternal grandmother; the Downes family, of Rotherham, who married into the Kent family of Kimberworth, were wool merchants and yeoman landowners.
Willis was educated at Uppingham and Rugby, then admitted in 1807 to Trinity College, Cambridge. He migrated in 1809 to Sidney Sussex College, graduating BA in 1813, and MA in 1819. Ordained a deacon in 1813, and a priest in 1814, by Edward Venables-Vernon-Harcourt, Archbishop of York, Willis was curate- later priest- at Pontefract, Yorkshire until 1816. In 1817 he was appointed curate of Seamer, Yorkshire, and was then made vicar of Kirkby-in-Cleveland, Yorkshire, holding this position until 1841; additionally, in 1827, he was made a stipendiary curate at Walcot, Bath, Somerset. His next position was as rector of Elsted with Treyford and Didling, Sussex, which he held from 1841 until his death.
During his time working in Somerset, Willis became friendly with his colleague, the curate of Holy Trinity Church, Bath; following a murder that took place in 1828, where a maidservant had discovered the thefts committed by a male servant of the same household and was killed by him, Willis gave nine sermons denouncing, in 'forthright and vigorous' terms, such dishonesty and sinful conduct on the part of domestics; he was subsequently mobbed in the streets by servants who took exception to his words. Learning that his next sermon was to be interrupted, Willis took as his text Galatians 4.16: "Am I therefore become your enemy, because I tell you the truth?" In response to this, the congregation quietly left the church with no further trouble. Attendance increased to a new high following these events- on Christmas Day, 1829, 413 people received Communion, a number unequalled before or since. These sermons were published as 'Sermons for Servants' in 1829. He additionally wrote a volume on 'Simony, together with some account of the Puritan Feoffees, A.D. 1626', published in 1836 and reprinted in 1842. On a reprinting of this volume in 1865, The Ecclesiastic magazine considered in its review that Willis had 'done good service to the Church in seizing this opportunity for a renewed protest against one of the greatest evils that is eating out her vitality'.
From 1831, Willis was founder and Honorary Secretary of the Bath Friendly Society, an organisation aiming to 'encourage thrift and care in the way members ran their lives', maintaining strong links with Holy Trinity church. Other clubs, medical organisations and societies came into existence under the influence of the Bath Friendly Society, benefiting the local community.
Willis additionally served as Rural Dean of Bath from 1830 until 1840, in which year he was appointed a Prebendary of Wells Cathedral. He was a correspondent of John Henry Newman on subjects including the increase of control of church property by the Evangelicals through purchase of advowsons.
Willis died 22 October 1871. He had married, in 1822, Dorothy, daughter of Rev. W. M. S. Preston, M.A., of Warcop Hall, Westmorland. They had four sons and four daughters, none of whom had issue; the two elder sons died as a schoolboy and as a lieutenant in the 9th Royal Lancers in India, respectively, and the two younger died young. One daughter died young, the other three remaining unmarried. Willis's brother, John Walpole Willis, was a colonial judge and author of legal texts. His brother's descendants include Frederick Smythe Willis, Mayor of Willoughby, New South Wales, and the politician and historian John William Willis-Bund.