18 Sept 2022

William Stevens at St. Nicholas Church, Otham, Downswood, Kent.

St. Nicholas Church in Otham is a typical Kent church with lots of charm.

One of the memorials inside the church is for a gentleman named William Stevens. His gravestone outside is illegible but has been there since 1807 when he passed away. Stevens was born in Southwark in 1732 and was an English hosier and lay writer on religious matters from a High Church perspective. He was the biographer and editor of the works of William Jones of Nayland.

Why Otham? Stevens mother was the sister of the Rev. Samuel Horne of Otham. He was educated at Maidstone with his cousin George Horne who became the bishop of Norwich. 

Stevens gave away his money periodically to various causes and learnt French, Latin, Greek and Hebrew. He used the pseudonym again, Hebrew for “nobody”. In 1800 a club that met three times a year was founded in his honour by his friends called “Nobody’s Works”. The club limited membership to 50 members from various walks of life with the only qualification being that they knew Stevens. The club still exists as The Club of Nobody’s Friends - a private dining club with the motto Pro Ecclesia et Rege (For the Church and the King). They meet at Lambeth Palace and a noteworthy incident was in 1962 when Launcelot Fleming, a former bishop of Norwich, was found to be ‘worse for wear’ and acquired a motorbike helmet and was found by friends singing “I’m a space bishop”.

Recommended reading - Who’s Buried Where In Kent by Alan Major - the book that made me aware of William Stevens. 

Online Find A Grave memorial here.  




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