Talk:Bernard Walke

Potential additional sources
Here's a list of sources I found while trying to find some basic background and demographic info that may be helpful:


 * Books
 * Andrew Chandler. The Church and Humanity: The Life and Work of George Bell, 1883-1958. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.; 1 May 2012. ISBN 978-1-4094-2556-4. p. 49.
 * Dominic Janes; Gary Fredric Waller. Walsingham in Literature and Culture from the Middle Ages to Modernity. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.; 30 July 2010. ISBN 978-0-7546-6924-1. p. 139.
 * Roy Tricker. Mr. Wason...I Think. Gracewing Publishing; 1 October 1995. ISBN 978-0-85244-291-3. p. ix, xi, 14, 18, 48.
 * Christopher Tyne. Tumult and Joy: A short history of St. Hilary


 * Web sources
 * The story of playwright and controversial priest Bernard Walke at St Hilary Heritage Centre
 * A Cornish Parish - about the plays
 * When Walke battled the Kensitites
 * Plays from St Hilary
 * St Hilary bells - made famous during Walke's BBC broadcasts
 * Father Gresham Kirkby - Restless, radical priest who built his ministry in a remarkable church, inspired by Walke
 * St Hilary's Children's Home - used this source for the article
 * Village celebrates new community and heritage centres - Seems both Walkes founded the Children's Home - used this source for the article
 * Denys Val Baker Connection between artists and St. Hilary Church / Bernard Walke
 * Annie Walke - anything I may have not included in Annie's article that could be used

-- CaroleHenson  ( talk ) 00:27, 3 October 2012 (UTC)
 * Potential ideas since not likely a reliable source
 * Father Bernard Walke and Gerard Collier. - Two great men of peace who forged a close partnership.
 * There are useful details about Gerard Collier in pp. 146-51 & 177-78 of Twenty Years. He died of muscular paralysis on 27 April 1923. (A bad mistake in the index omits him entirely.) The Quaker Arthur Jenkins was an associate of Walke and Collier and appears on pp. 150-51.--Felix Folio Secundus (talk) 15:08, 12 October 2012 (UTC)
 * Added strike outs for the sources I used for the article.-- CaroleHenson  ( talk ) 23:08, 4 October 2012 (UTC)

The Battery
From User talk:Pamela.urquhart: Please note that Bernard Walke lived and died at Battery Terrace, Mevagissey, Cornwall, NOT The Battery. I was born in Mevagissey and lived there so I have knowledge of this.
 * It may still be that the Times described his residence as "the Battery".--Felix Folio Secundus (talk) 10:53, 25 July 2013 (UTC)