Wolfe Wagner

Last updated

William Wolfe Wagner was an Irish Anglican clergyman. [1]

Wagner was educated at Trinity College, Dublin [2] and ordained in 1887. [3] After Curacies in Kileevan and Drumreilly, he was the incumbent at Kilmactranny from 1893 until 1910. He was Archdeacon of Elphin from then until his death in 1937. [4]

Related Research Articles

Roger Boyle was an Irish Protestant churchman, Bishop of Down and Connor and Bishop of Clogher.

William Perceval, D.D. was an Irish priest in the first decades of the 18th century.

Edmund Donellan was an Irish Anglican clergyman.

Alexander Major Kearney was an Irish Anglican clergyman.

Francis Edward Clarke was an Irish Anglican clergyman.

Nicholas Synge was an 18th-century Irish Anglican priest.

George Chinnery was an Anglican bishop in Ireland during the second half of the 18th century.

Robert Johnson was an Anglican bishop in Ireland during the mid-18th century.

Anthony Martin was an Anglican priest in Ireland during the first half of the 17th-century.

William Cotterell (c.1698–1744) was an eighteenth-century Church of Ireland priest. He was the third son of the courtier Charles Lodowick Cotterell and his second wife, Elizabeth Chute.

Robert Bell, D.D. (1808-1883) was Archdeacon of Cashel from 1879 until his death.

Pascal Ducasse was a Church of Ireland Dean in the first half of the 18th century.

William Gore 921 January 1779 - 6 January 1831) was a Church of Ireland priest.

Caesar Williamson was Dean of Cashel from 1671 until 1675.

John Sandwith Boys Smith was a 20th-century British priest and academic.

Robert King (1723–1787) was an 18th-century Anglican priest in Ireland.

John Hinton was an Anglican priest in Ireland during the first half of the eighteenth century.

Robert Burrowes, D.D., was an Anglican priest in Ireland during the second half of the 18th and the first half of the 19th centuries.

Thomas Hill was an Anglican priest in Ireland during the late 18th and early 19th centuries.

Edward How was an Anglican Archdeacon in Ireland in the late 17th-century.

References

  1. Fifty Years of Disestablishment
  2. "Alumni Dublinenses : a register of the students, graduates, professors and provosts of Trinity College in the University of Dublin (1593-1860)" Burtchaell, George Dames/Sadleir, Thomas Ulick (Eds) p237: Dublin, Alex Thom and Co, 1935
  3. Crockford's Clerical Directory 1929 p 1336: Oxford, OUP, 1929
  4. Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I., eds. (1986). Handbook of British Chronology (3rd, reprinted 2003 ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN   0-521-56350-X.