Sir Francis Arthur Stanley ffolkes, 5th Baronet MVO JP (8 December 1863 — 18 October or 20 October 1938) was an English baronet and Anglican priest who served successive monarchs of the United Kingdom as an Honorary Chaplain and Chaplain-in-Ordinary.
[1] After his schooling at Oakham, ffolkes studied at Durham University (Hatfield Hall) where he completed a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1885.
[3] During the First World War ffolkes served as a padre on attachment to the Norfolk Yeomanry.
[4] In 1939 a memorial window dedicated to ffolkes was installed in the Lady Chapel of St Andrew's Church, East Hagbourne, as the gift of his sister, Margaret, the former Viscountess Dillon, who resided in the village, to which ffolkes was in his later years a frequent visitor.
[5] The scene was apparently inspired by a speech given by ffolkes' nephew Tracy Philipps the previous Autumn at a meeting of the Near and Middle East Association, in which he expressed hope that one day in Jerusalem there would be a 'triple equality', with Jews, Christians, and Muslims living together in peace.