1852-1938

1852, Burn­ley, Lan­ca­shire, Eng­land.

Oc­to­ber 1938, Burn­ley, Lan­ca­shire, Eng­land.

Burn­ley, Lan­ca­shire, Eng­land.

Son of Rich­ard and Jane Holmes, Henry’s fa­ther and great grand­fa­ther were both so­li­ci­tors; his fa­ther had of­fices in Colne and Burn­ley. Henry was ed­u­cat­ed at Clith­er­oe Roy­al Gram­mar School. In 1875 he be­came an At­torney for Com­mon Law and was ad­mit­ted a So­li­ci­tor of the High Court of Chan­ce­ry. He was ar­ti­cled to his fa­ther in No­vem­ber 1869, and prac­ticed in Burn­ley for over 60 years, first in part­ner­ship with his bro­ther Rich­ard Marm­ad­uke as Holmes and Holmes. He con­tin­ued to practice on his own as Holmes and Holmes after his brother’s death in 1894, and later as Messrs. Holmes, But­ter­field and Hart­ley. Holmes had moved from the fam­i­ly home on West­gate some time af­ter the death of his sis­ter Susannah in 1878. By 1881, he was liv­ing at 12 Pal­a­tine Square.

Holmes was in­ti­mate­ly as­so­ci­at­ed with church and Sunday school work all his life. At age 17, he be­came a teach­er and lat­er a lay su­per­in­ten­dent of San­dy­gate Sun­day school, con­nect­ed with Ho­ly Trin­i­ty Church, a po­si­tion he held near­ly 20 years. From the 1880’s he took a deep in­ter­est in “The Home for Lit­tle Boys” at Farn­ing­ham, Kent. His de­sire to help in this work led to the for­ma­tion of the Burn­ley branch of the Na­tion­al So­ci­e­ty for the Pre­ven­tion of Cruel­ty to Child­ren. Ano­ther or­gan­iz­a­tion that Holmes took a great in­ter­est in was the Burn­ley Law So­ci­e­ty, which he helped found in 1883; he lived to be the last sur­viv­or of the eight found­ers.

Holmes is said to have writ­ten over 250 hymn tunes in his life.

  1. Armentieres
  2. Charleville
  3. Crystal Sea
  4. Derry
  5. Love Di­vine
  6. Pater Om­ni­um
  7. Pax Dei
  8. Repose