Annals Of A Clerical Family charts the lives and labours of the Venns, centred on William Venn, vicar of Otterton, Devon, 1600-1621. Brisk, exact, absorbing family history. John Venn's meticulous account functions as both a clerical family history and an English genealogy collection: part register, part narrative biography. Drawing on Devonshire family records and parish sources, it traces Venn family descendants across the seventeenth century and shows how Anglican church history and local life met in the parsonage. Framed in the voice of a Victorian nonfiction book, the work balances documentary rigour with readable prose, so that specialists find reliable material and casual readers find a vivid sense of place and person. As a source of historical clergy biographies the volume has lasting value: it preserves names, careers and connections that underpin wider studies of early modern England and of Church of England heritage. It is a practical genealogy research resource for British ancestry readers while also offering narrative threads that reveal how clerical families negotiated patronage, marriage and local responsibility. The book's significance lies in its methodical accumulation of detail: the aggregate of parish entries and family notice gives shape to social history, turning fragmentary evidence into a coherent portrait of 17th century Devon and of the social fabric that sustained Anglican ministry. It also carries quiet literary value: a restrained nineteenth-century voice that complements later histories of religion and local life. Readers curious about the mechanics of parish appointment and the social currency of clerical office find the book's sober records unexpectedly revealing. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today's and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector's item and a cultural treasure. Suitable for casual readers, family historians and classic-literature collectors alike, this edition preserves a quiet but authoritative voice in British local history and appeals to those tracing the Venn family descendants or exploring the roots of clerical life.