Hugh Hordern

Hugh Maudslay Hordern (28 September 1868 – 25 March 1949) was the sixth Bishop of Lewes.

[1] According to Burke's Landed Gentry (1952) He was born on 28 September 1868 and grew up at Throwley House, Faversham, Kent.

[Who Was Who, A&C Black] He was Vucar of St Nicholas, Brighton, from 1910 to 1924, also acting as a chaplain to the Territorial Army from June 1914 to 1922.

His grandson Peter Hordern was Member of Parliament (MP) for Horsham from 1964 to 1997.

Other members of his family who were also involved in the First World War were his brothers: Boer War and First World War general Gwyn Venables Hordern, of Baughurst House, Ramsdell, Hampshire, (also an accomplished cricketer who scored a half century, in 1896, for the KRRC against a Free Foresters Team which included C. J. Kortright, whom Wisden described that year as the fastest bowler in the history of the game); captain Lionel Herbert Hordern, of Throwley House, Faversham, Kent; and Radcliffe Hordern of Warrenton, Virginia, whose son Herbert Radcliffe Hordern, served in the Irish Guards and died of wounds from the First World War.