Background
The eldest son of Robert Philip Tyrwhitt (1798–1886), a police magistrate, and his wife Catherine Wigley, daughter of Henry Saint John, he was born on 19 March 1827.
The eldest son of Robert Philip Tyrwhitt (1798–1886), a police magistrate, and his wife Catherine Wigley, daughter of Henry Saint John, he was born on 19 March 1827.
He graduated Bachelor of Arts in 1849 and Master of Arts
He matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford, on 15 May 1845, was a student from 1845 to 1859, tutor from 1852 to 1856, and rhetoric reader in 1856. in 1852. In 1851 he was ordained, and from 1858 to 1872 he held the vicarage of Street Mary Magdalen"s Church, Oxford. He died at 62 Banbury Road, Oxford, on 6 November 1895.
During the contested 1877 election for the Oxford Professorship of Poetry, Tyrwhitt attacked John Addington Symonds, a candidate, in a piece "The Greek Spirit in Modern Literature" in the Contemporary Review.
Tyrwhitt married, first, on 28 June 1858, Eliza Ann, daughter of John Spencer Stanhope of Cannon Hall, Yorkshire. She died on 8 September 1859, leaving a son, Walter Spencer Stanhope, a lieutenant in the Warwick militia.
By a second marriage, on 2 January 1861, to Caroline (died 1883), youngest daughter of John Yorke of Bewerley Hall, Yorkshire, he had six children.
During the contested 1877 election for the Oxford Professorship of Poetry, Tyrwhitt attacked John Addington Symonds, a candidate, in a piece "The Greek Spirit in Modern Literature" in the Contemporary Review. The argument also took in Benjamin Jowett, suspected of unorthodox religious views. Symonds found it telling, and withdrew his candidacy shortly before the election.
Tyrwhitt"s piece has been characterised as homophobic, and caused the withdrawal of Walter Pater too. Also in the Contemporary Review, he argued in 1878 that belief in evolution was compatible with Christianity, and that John Tyndall was incorrect in thinking otherwise.
Friendship with John Henry Parker led Tyrwhitt into the debate over the Roman catacombs and their significance. Here he tried to keep to a middle, non-sectarian way of interpretation, following Henry Reeve, with emphasis on the evidence of growth of early Christianity.
Tyrwhitt was an admirer of John Ruskin, in whose favour he withdrew his candidature for the Slade Professorship of Fine Art in 1869. He was accounted a member of the Guild of Street George in 1876. He was a member of the committee for the decoration of Street Paul"s Cathedral.