Irons, born at
Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire, 12 September 1812, was second son of the Rev. Joseph Irons (1785–1852), by his first wife, Mary Ann, daughter of William Broderick. His mother died in 1828. His father, a popular
evangelical preacher, born at
Ware, Hertfordshire, on 5 November 1785, commenced preaching in March 1808 under the auspices of the
London Itinerant Society, was ordained an independent minister on 21 May 1814, was stationed at
Hoddesdon from 1812 to 1815, and at
Sawston, near
Cambridge, from 1815 to 1818, and was minister of Grove Chapel,
Camberwell, Surrey, from 1818 until his death at Camberwell on 3 April 1852. William Josiah, after being educated at home, matriculated from
Queen's College, Oxford, on 12 May 1829, and graduated B.A. 1833,
M.A. 1835, BD 1842, and DD 1854. He was curate of St. Mary,
Newington Butts, Surrey, from 1835 till 1837, when he was presented to the living of St. Peter's,
Walworth. He became vicar of
Barkway in Hertfordshire in 1838, vicar of
Brompton, Middlesex, 17 September 1840,
prebendary of
St Paul's Cathedral December 1860, rector of
Waddingham, Lincolnshire, 6 April 1870, and on 7 June 1872 rector of
St. Mary Woolnoth with St. Mary Woolchurch-Haw in the
city of London, on the presentation of
William Ewart Gladstone, the then
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. In 1870 he was
Bampton lecturer at Oxford, and his published lectures,
Christianity as taught by St. Paul, reached a second edition in 1876. He died at 20
Gordon Square, London, on 18 June 1883. He married first, in 1839, Ann, eldest daughter of John Melhuish of Upper Tooting, who died 14 July 1853; and secondly, on 28 December 1854, Sarah Albinia Louisa, youngest daughter of Sir
Lancelot Shadwell; she died 15 December 1887. ==Works==