[1] He had previously been a first-class English cricketer, making five appearances (two for Gloucestershire: and three for the Free Foresters);[2] he was a right-handed batsman.
[8] His first post was overseas (South Africa) as vicar of Krugersdorp and St Boniface Church, Germiston.
[11] Remaining at Redcliffe until 1928, he became also Rural Dean of Bedminster starting in 1927, before a ten-year stint as Vicar of Newcastle Cathedral (to which he was instituted on 31 October 1928).
[15] On 15 July 1944, he was appointed as the second principal of the RAF Chaplains' School based at Magdalene College, Cambridge.
His brothers Claude, Francis and Hugh all played first-class cricket, as did his brother-in-law Frederick Currie.