Anglican diocese of Barbados

Interior of St Michael's Cathedral

The Anglican Diocese of Barbados is one of eight dioceses within the Province of the West Indies.

The diocese was established in 1824 as one of a pair, the other being the Diocese of Jamaica, which covered the whole Caribbean. Before that, the area was nominally part of the Bishop of London's responsibility, a situation that had been assumed to hold from 1660 onwards. In 1813, the then Bishop of London denied it was his responsibility, and so it turned out that appointments to the Church in the Colonies were recommended by the local governor, in this case of the Leeward Islands.[1]

The Barbados diocese initially also covered Trinidad, British Guiana, the Leeward Islands and the Windward Islands. It was later divided on the retirement in 1841/2 of the first Bishop: his three Archdeacons took charge as the Bishop of Antigua (covering the Leeward Islands) (Daniel Gateward Davis), of Barbados (including Trinidad and the Windward Islands) (Parry) and the Bishop of British Guiana (William Piercy Austin).

The Cathedral Church of Saint Michael and All Angels (formerly St. Michael's Parish Church), is located in the centre of Bridgetown, Barbados. Originally consecrated in 1665, and then rebuilt in 1789, it was elevated to Cathedral status in 1825 with the appointment of Bishop Coleridge to head the newly created Diocese of Barbados and the Leeward Islands.

The bishop's official residence was located at Bishop's Court Hill along Upper Colleymore Rock Road (Highway 6).[2]

There is also a Roman Catholic diocese based in Barbados, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bridgetown.

Anglican Bishops of Barbados

  1. 18241842 William Coleridge (17891849)
  2. 18421869 Thomas Parry (17951870)
  3. 18731881 John Mitchinson (18331918)
  4. 18821899 Herbert Bree (1828–1899)
  5. 19001916 Proctor Swaby (1844–1916)
  6. 19171927 Alfred Berkeley (18621938) (afterwards Bishop of the Windward Islands, 1927)
  7. 19271945 David Bentley (18821970)
  8. 19451951 James Hughes (1894–1979)
  9. 19511960 Gay Mandeville (1894–1969)
  10. 19601972 Lewis Evans (1904–1996)
  11. 19721993 Drexel Gomez (born 1937)
  12. 19932000 Rufus Brome (born 1935)
  13. 2000present John Holder (born 1948)

See also

References

  1. Correspondence in Lambeth Palace archives
  2. Bishop’s Court to be developed

External links

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