Christopher Henry Dawson was born to an Anglo-Catholic family in the Bevan ancestral home of
Hay Castle, during the waning years of the Victorian era, and spent most of his childhood among the ruins of the Yorkshire countryside. His parents were Captain Henry P. Dawson and Mary Louisa, the eldest daughter to the Welsh
Archdeacon Bevan. Captain Dawson, although an army officer, was more of an explorer than a soldier, and the closest he ever came to actual combat was behind the front-lines in the
Franco-Prussian War. He joined a field-ambulance unit with his cousin
Herbert Kitchener, later Lord Kitchener of Khartoum. Dawson was raised in a devout
Anglo-Catholic household. Dawson's childhood was reported to be a happy one, spending most of his time in the place which would set the course for his interest in history: The Yorkshire countryside. It is here where Dawson would roam around through abbeys and castles for numerous hours. Dawson experienced the past not as an object of distant sentimentality but as something near to the present which one can find meaning in. In 1899, he was sent to
Bilton Grange for public school. As a consequence of living predominantly secluded from any social interactions besides that of his family, he was frightened of germs. Dawson was exceptional in only History and English. Dawson suffered from internal torment when facing the world outside his cherished home life. The pain which he had suffered during his time there stuck with him. His daughter recalled an incident when he neared the gates of a school she was about to attend, Dawson murmured "I can't face it"; he left the car and sat in the wood reading a book. In 1903, Dawson's father enrolled him to
Winchester College. Dawson was a schoolmate of
Arnold J. Toynbee but they never encountered each other. Dawson cultivated "a strong historical consciousness that was fed by the aesthetics of that ancient place of worship" Dawson later wrote of his experience at
Winchester Cathedral: However, he later stated that Winchester College "was the best of English schools". He was brought up at
Hartlington Hall,
Yorkshire. Dawson was educated at
Winchester College and
Trinity College, Oxford, where he obtained 2nd class honours in Modern History in 1911. After his degree he studied economics. He also read the work of the German theologian
Ernst Troeltsch. During his youth, Dawson had cultivated a profuse interest in Catholicism by virtue of his father's own interests for Roman Catholicism. Dawson recognised a moral and spiritual beauty within the Catholic Church, leading to an intellectual awakening which culminated in his conversion on the Feast of the Epiphany in 1914. Dawson reflected on this time: In 1916, Dawson married Valery Mills, daughter of the architect
Walter Edward Mills. They had two daughters and one son. ==Career==