Buxton's first appointment was as
Curate of St Stephen's,
Clapham Park, from 1907 to 1909. In 1910 he received his first
benefice, becoming Vicar of the Church of the Martyrs,
Leicester, where he remained three years, then from 1914 to 1919 was Vicar of All Saints,
Southport. For part of that time he was
Chaplain to the Forces in the latter part of the First World War and a little beyond it, serving from 1916 to 1919. He resigned his Southport living before leaving the service of the British Army. taking up residence at All Souls Rectory, 12,
Weymouth Street,
Westminster. This was a very smart Church of England living, with the church standing at the north end of
Regent Street, and at the time was worth £640 a year, , plus a fine house in an elegant part of the capital city. In March 1923, Buxton gave an interview to
The Daily Express in which he said the coming of flats in fashionable neighbourhoods had caused a fall in church attendance. At Langham Place, Buxton was identified with a new kind of churchman. Not only did he try to make his church attractive, up-to-date, and relevant to the times, but he also moved its theological style away from the firm
Evangelicalism of his predecessors towards a less Protestant form of
Anglicanism, referred to at the time as "Liberal Evangelicalism". Under the heading "Can the Rector Fly?", in January 1933 the
Kensington Post reported that Buxton was planning to attend a Conference in
Cannes and would not be going by "ordinary common or garden mode of travel"; as an up-to-date clergyman he would instead travel by air. In August 1933, Buxton appointed
Dr John Ivimey, the director of music at
Marlborough College, as organist and director of music at All Souls. In January 1937, during the
Spanish Civil War, Buxton visited his cousin
Harold Buxton, who was then
Bishop of Gibraltar, and during the last week of January they visited areas of Spain held by the
Nationalists, led by
Franco. ==Notable services==