John Philip Du Moulin was a Canadian Anglican bishop in the last decade of the 19th century and the first two of the 20th century. [1]
Born in 1834, he was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland [2] and ordained in 1863. His first posts were curacies at St John's, London, Ontario and Holy Trinity, Montreal. He held incumbencies at St Thomas's Hamilton and St Martin's Montreal. He was then a canon at St James's Cathedral, Toronto and then Sub-Dean of St Alban's Cathedral in the same city before his ordination in 1896 to the episcopate as the third Bishop of Niagara. [3] He died on 29 March 1911. [4]
Christopher Wordsworth was an English intellectual and a bishop of the Anglican Church.
The Anglican Church of Canada is the province of the Anglican Communion in Canada. The official French-language name is l'Église anglicane du Canada. In 2017, the Anglican Church counted 359,030 members on parish rolls in 2,206 congregations, organized into 1,571 parishes. The 2011 Canadian census counted 1,631,845 self-identified Anglicans, making the Anglican Church the third-largest Canadian church after the Catholic Church and the United Church of Canada. The 2021 Canadian census counted more than 1 million self-identified Anglicans, remaining the third-largest Canadian church.
Charles Richard Sumner was a Church of England bishop.
The Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral is the senior cleric of the Protestant St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, elected by the chapter of the cathedral. The office was created in 1219 or 1220, by one of several charters granted to the cathedral by Archbishop Henry de Loundres between 1218 and 1220.
The Diocese of Niagara is one of thirty regional divisions in the Anglican Church of Canada. The see city of the diocese is Hamilton, with the bishop's cathedra located at Christ's Church Cathedral on James Street North. Located within the ecclesiastical province of Ontario, it borders the Dioceses of Huron and Toronto. The area enclosed by the Diocese of Niagara includes much of the Golden Horseshoe, and moves north to include Erin and Orangeville as far as Shelburne. Moving sharply south the line includes Mount Forest and widens, south-westerly to include Elora and Guelph. Skirting Brantford and the Territory of the Six Nations Confederacy, the line then travels, again, south-westerly to Jarvis and Lake Erie to include the entire Niagara Peninsula. Major urban centres within its borders are St. Catharines, Niagara Falls, Hamilton, Guelph, Oakville, Milton, Burlington, and Orangeville.
The Diocese of Toronto is an administrative division of the Anglican Church of Canada covering the central part of southern Ontario. It was founded in 1839 and is the oldest of the seven dioceses comprising the Ecclesiastical Province of Ontario. It has the most members of any Anglican diocese in Canada. It is also one of the biggest Anglican dioceses in the Americas in terms of numbers of parishioners, clergy and parishes. As of 2018, the diocese has around 230 congregations and ministries in 183 parishes, with approximately 54,000 Anglicans identified on parish rolls.
Kenneth John Woollcombe was an Anglican academic who was Bishop of Oxford in the middle part of his career, from 1971 to 1978.
Owen Thomas Lloyd Crossley was the fourth Anglican Bishop of Auckland for a short period during the second decade of the 20th century. Educated at the Belfast Academy and Trinity College, Dublin he was made deacon 8 June 1884 and ordained priest 31 May 1885, both times at Down; and began his ecclesiastical career with a curacy at Seapatrick, County Down. Incumbencies at St John's Church, Egremont and Almondbury were followed by a period living in Australia, including six years as Vicar of All Saints, St Kilda, and Archdeacon of Geelong. He was also Archbishop's Chaplain, a lecturer at St John's Theological College, Melbourne (1907-1911), and Chairman of Governors of Geelong Grammar School. Not long after his appointment in 1905, he was elected to a vacancy on the Council of Trinity College. On 25 March 1911, he was appointed to the episcopate as Bishop of Auckland.
Thomas William Cook was the Anglican Bishop of Lewes for a brief period in the second quarter of the 20th century.
Ernest Edwin Curtis was an Anglican Archbishop in the second half of the 20th century.
John Ralph Strickland Taylor was Bishop of Sodor and Man from 1942 to 1954.
Frederick Brodie MacNutt was an Anglican priest and author in the first half of the 20th century.
Herbert Mather (1840–1916) was an Anglican bishop in the last decades of the 19th century and the first part of the 20th.
George Thorneloe was a Canadian Anglican bishop at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th.
William Reid Clark was a Canadian Anglican bishop in the first decades of the 20th century.
John Charles Bothwell was a Canadian Anglican bishop and author in the second half of the 20th century.
Walter Gordon Asbil was a Canadian Anglican bishop.
Henry Stewart O’Hara was an eminent Church of Ireland bishop in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Henry Pryor Almon Abbott was a prelate of the Episcopal Church, who served as Bishop of Lexington from 1929 to 1945.