![William Bramley-Moore William Bramley-Moore](/modules/owlapps_apps/img/nopic.jpg)
William Joseph Bramley-Moore (1831–1918) was an English priest of the Church of England and author. He is known for his historical novel The Six Sisters of the Valleys (1864), set in Piedmont in 1665, with a strong anti-Catholic tone.
He was the eldest son of John Bramley-Moore and his wife Seraphina Pennell, who married in 1830 in Rio de Janeiro and moved in 1833 to Liverpool where John Moore (as he was then) was a merchant. His family background was described by Nathaniel Hawthorne, invited in 1854 by John Bramley-Moore to a dinner at Aigburth, to meet the novelist Samuel Warren. He described the parents as "violent tories, fanatics for the Established Church" and followers of the evangelical Hugh M'Neile (heard as McMill by Hawthorne), the "present Low-Church Pope of Liverpool". Conversation was against the Tractarians and Roman Catholic influence, and with more talk about money from John than Hawthorne was used to with the English upper classes. In Seraphina he found a Calvinist of a familiar type, "outrageously religious" as well as vulgar.
Bramley-Moore was educated at Eton College. He matriculated at Trinity College, Cambridge in 1849, graduating B.A. in 1853 and M.A. in 1857. He was ordained deacon in 1855, becoming curate at Brenchley for a year. He was ordained priest in 1856. He was travelling in Italy in 1857 when he and his companion were attacked, the companion dying of wounds. He was vicar of Gerrard's Cross from 1860 to 1869. From 1863 his father bought and improved nearby property.
Crockford's Clerical Directory for 1872 showed no further living taken by Bramley-Moore after 1869, his replacement at Gerrard's Cross being William Addington Bathurst (1839–1922). In later life he lived in London, at 19 Woburn Square and then at 26 Russell Square. William Hechler gave a talk on biblical chronology at 26 Russell Square in 1892.
Bramley-Moore's single literary work was The Six Sisters of the Valley, a three-volume novel published 1864, and set in the period of the Savoyard–Waldensian wars. The plot is based on the story recorded by the Waldensian pastor Jean Léger, and commented on by Alexis Muston, of six brothers who married six sisters and brought up a large family group, who suffered religious persecution. The reviewer in the Illustrated London News, conceding the historicity of the material, objected to the treatment: "Horror is piled upon horror". Bramley-Moore had visited the area on his 1857 tour in Italy.
He was the editor for Cassell of The Book of Martyrs, revised, which ran to a number of editions from 1866. This was a derived work, illustrated by engravings, based on Foxe's Book of Martyrs, from the 16th century. It was brought up to date with the 1866 killings at Barletta in southern Italy of the pastor Gaetano Giannini and five others in anti-Protestant riots. The engravings were by William Luson Thomas.
Bramley-Moore married in 1865 Ella Bradshaw Jordan, third daughter of Swinfen Jordan of Clifton. They had six sons and four daughters, according to a Who's Who entry; but there were verifiably more sons (see below). This was a first cousin marriage: Swinfen Jordan married Louisa Pennell, one of the sisters of Seraphina, Bramley-Moore's mother. They were both among the 22 children of William Pennell, British consul in Brazil, as was "Nony" Croker who married Sir George Barrow, 2nd Baronet, adopted daughter of John Wilson Croker, who himself married the eldest of the sisters, Rosamund Carrington Pennell, in 1806.
The sons included:
Edward Bramley-Moore, fifth son, drowned on the high seas at age 15 in 1887 "while in the execution of his duty".
Of the daughters:
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