Reckitt, Maurice B. (Maurice Benington), 1888-1980

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Epithet: writer and sociologist

British Library Archives and Manuscripts Catalogue : Person : Description : ark:/81055/vdc_100000001123.0x00031b

Maurice Benington Reckitt (1888-1980) was born at Beverley, Yorkshire, into a prosperous family whose fortune was founded in the chemical industry. He was educated privately and at St John's College, Oxford (1907-10), where he read history with Ernest Barker, H. A. L. Fisher and others. After teaching at Ipswich Grammar School for two years (1911-13), he was able through personal wealth to devote himself to the causes he believed in. Liberal-minded in politics and Christian in belief, he sought to live a life of social concern and enlightened churchmanship.

As a Socialist and an early defender of the welfare state, Reckitt wrote and spoke in many of the debates on Socialist thought and action which occupied the left between 1910 and 1930. In 1913 he contributed the first of a series of articles and reviews to New Age , which had been re-founded in 1907 under the editorship of A. R. Orage and Holbrook Jackson to educate a Socialist readership. He assisted G. D. H. Cole in 1915 when he founded the National Guilds League to propagate a more formal expression of the new doctrines of guild socialism, and at the same time enrolled as an unpaid assistant in the Fabian Research Department. After the war Reckitt was active in a succession of groups which aimed to create a more just and equitable society. The Social Credit Movement founded by Major C. H. Douglas aimed to create and distribute increased prosperity by the control of credit and sound fiscal methods in contrast to contemporary capitalist practice. G. K's Weekly, founded by G. K. Chesterton in 1925, propagandised for Catholic ethics and economics, in particular for the redistribution of the nation's wealth as a means of creating a class of owner-producers and of strengthening small shopkeepers in the fight against big business. The Distributist League, founded in 1926, had similar objectives. The Chandos Group (1926) sought to revive the ideas of social credit, and through its activities Reckitt met among others W. T. Symons, Philip Mairet and V. A. Demant. When in 1932 New English Weekly succeeded New Age , Reckitt continued to write for it regularly until its demise, first as a contributor (1932-34), later as editor and leader-writer (1934-49).

In religion Reckitt was influenced by his mother who educated him in a mixture of Tractarian principles and contemporary Anglo-Catholic practices, and by Fr J. N. Figgis who about 1910 introduced him to the Christian Socialist writings of F. T. Maurice, Scott-Holland, and Charles Gore. In 1909 Reckitt joined the Church Socialist League which had inherited from Headlam's Guild of St Matthew a mixture of Maurice's theology and Tractarian practice which embodied the principal expression of Socialist teaching within the church. At the annual conference of the League at Coventry in 1913 Reckitt met P. E. T. Widdrington, a Christian deeply convinced of the role of the church in achieving social justice, and he began to contribute articles to Church Socialist . When the Russian revolution split the League Reckitt, with Demant and others, followed Widdrington into the 'League of the Kingdom of God' (1923). The search for a specifically Christian method of social analysis raised within the group questions being debated by members of the official Anglo-Catholic community, and the two circles met regularly at the Summer School of Theology at Oxford (1925-45). Among the most active supporters of the school were Demant, Ruth Kenyon, W. G. Peck and Reginald Tribe.

The belief within the group that it was essential to revive indifferent industrial man with the enthusiasm of faith allowed in the influence of creative Christian writers, principally of T. S. Eliot, and through him the ideas of the leading European religious thinkers. Through the 1930s the group drew fresh stimulus from the new generation of clerics, particularly Patrick McLaughlin, E. L. Mascall, J. V. L. Casserley, David Peck, George Every and D. M. Mackinnon. These and like-minded writers found a forum in the journal Christendom , which Reckitt founded in 1931 and edited until 1951, and in such co-operative works as Prospect for Christendom, edited by Reckitt in 1945. Reckitt's own most important book, Faith and Society, was published in 1934. On the demise of the group Reckitt established the Christendom Trust (1971), which sought through its meetings and through the sponsorship of a research fellowship to promote Christian social thinking. The Trust survived Reckitt's death in 1980.

See M. B. Reckitt, As it happened: an autobiography (1941); Christendom Trust, M. B. R. (1978); J. S. Peart-Binns, Maurice B. Reckitt: a life (1988); D. Howell-Thomas, Bibliography of the writings of Maurice B. Reckitt, 2nd ed (1980).

From the guide to the The Reckitt Papers, 1903-1976, (University of Sussex Library)

Relation Name
associatedWith Christendom Trust corporateBody
associatedWith Industrial Christian Fellowship corporateBody
associatedWith McLaughlin Patrick fl 1933 person
associatedWith National Guilds League corporateBody
associatedWith Peart-Binns, John Stuart person
associatedWith Reckitt Maurice Bennington 1888-1980 person
associatedWith St Anne's Society corporateBody
associatedWith Widdrington Percy Elborough Tinling 1873-1959 person
Place Name Admin Code Country
Penn, Buckinghamshire
Subject
Christianity and politics Great Britain
Occupation
Activity

Person

Birth 1888-05-19

Death 1980-01-11

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