He was father of the philosopher Austin Duncan-Jones[7][8] and journalist Vincent Stuart Duncan-Jones, who served as General Secretary of the British Peace Committee (the British section of the World Peace Council) from 1950 to 1954, and went to Vienna in 1954 as part of the Secretariat of the World Peace Council.[9][10]
Works
Ordered Liberty, 1917
Church Music, 1920
The Aumbry and Hanging Pyx, 1925.
Archbishop Laud, 1927
A Good Friday Service, 1928
Story of Chichester Cathedral, London: Raphael Tuck & Sons, 1933
The Struggle for Religious Freedom in Germany, 1938
^Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, Part 2, Issue 3, Cambridge University Press, 1947, p. 593
^Dictionary of Twentieth-Century British Philosophers, vol. 1, A-L, ed. Stuart Brown, Hugh Terence Bredin, Thoemmes Continuum, 2005, p. 245
^"Intimately Associated for Many Years": George A. K. Bell's and Willem A. Visser't Hooft's Common Life-Work in the Service of the Church Universal- Mirrored in their Correspondence, part two 1950-1958, Gerhard Besier, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015, p. 680