William Crane Gray

For other bishops named William Gray or Grey, see William Grey (disambiguation).
The Rt. Rev. William Crane Gray
First Missionary Bishop of Southern Florida
Church Episcopal Church in the United States of America
See Missionary Jurisdiction of Southern Florida
In office 1892-1913
Successor Cameron Mann
II Bishop of Missionary Jurisdiction of Southern Florida & 1st Bishop of South Florida
Orders
Ordination 1860
Consecration 1892
Personal details
Born (1835-09-06)September 6, 1835
Lambertville, Hunterdon County, New Jersey
Died (1919-11-14)November 14, 1919
Nashville. Davidson County, Tennessee, buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery (Nashville)

William Crane Gray was the first bishop of the Episcopal Church's Missionary Jurisdiction of Southern Florida, which had been split off from the Episcopal Diocese of Florida in October 1892.[1]

Childhood and education

William Crane Gray was born in Lambertville, New Jersey, on September 6, 1835, the son of Joseph Gray and Hannah Price Gray.[2] When he was ten he and his parents moved to Tennessee. In 1859 he graduated from Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio and he then went to seminary at Bexley Hall, which was then located in Gambier.[1]

Ministry

William Crane Gray was ordained to the diaconate in 1859 and to the priesthood in 1860. He served as chaplain of a Tennessee regiment during the Civil War.

After the war, Gray served parishes in Bolivar and Nashville. After two decades as rector of the Church of the Advent in Nashville, he was elected bishop of the new Missionary Jurisdiction of Southern Florida. His consecration was held there.[1]

In south Florida, Bishop Gray found five self-supporting parishes, 40 organized missions and 11 mission stations. Among other churches established during his episcopate was a mission to the Seminoles in Immokalee (in 1898). In 1913, Bishop Edwin Garner Weed of Florida realized that the missionary Southern diocese had grown much more rapidly than the original diocese, due to the expansion of railroad service to Tampa and Key West, and suggested returning Marion and Volusia Counties to the original diocese, but that suggestion failed when only one of the thirteen parishes in the missionary district agreed.[3]

Gray served for 21 years in Florida before submitting his resignation on grounds of ill health in October 1913.[4]

Family

William Crane Gray's first wife was Margaret Locke Trent, whom he married on May 20, 1863. His second wife was Fannie Campbell Bowers, whom he married August 2, 1877. Their son, Campbell Gray born January 6, 1879, later became Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Northern Indiana.

Later life

William Crane Gray retired as Missionary Bishop of Southern Florida in 1913 and went to live with his son in Nashville, where he died on November 14, 1919. He was buried on November 16, 1919 in Mount Olivet Cemetery (Nashville)[5][6]

Note on the Missionary Jurisdiction of Southern Florida

The Missionary Jurisdiction of Southern Florida in 1922 became the Diocese of South Florida.[7] The diocese named its residence for retired clergy and others in Davenport, Florida after the first bishop. In 1969, the Diocese of South Florida was split into three dioceses as follows: the Diocese of Central Florida, the Diocese of Southeast Florida and the Diocese of Southwest Florida.

Sources

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Cushman, Joseph D., Jr., A Goodly Heritage: The Episcopal Church in Florida, 1821-1892, Gainesville: University of Florida Press (1965) pp. 199-200.
  2. Staff. "BISHOP EARNED RESPECT OF SEMINOLES", Miami Herald, October 3, 1994. Accessed February 25, 2011. "Born in Lambertville, NJ, Sept. 6, 1835, the future missionary bishop graduated from Kenyon College and Seminary in Gambier, Ohio."
  3. George R. Bentley, The Episcopal Diocese of Florida, 1892-1975 (Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1989), pp 76-77
  4. The First Hundred Years, 1890-1990, St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Plant City, Florida, p. 2
  5. Bishop Gray Defended Seminole Interests | TheLedger.com
  6. William Crane Gray at Find A Grave
  7. Cushman, Joseph D., Jr., A Goodly Heritage: The Episcopal Church in Florida, 1821-1892, Gainesville: University of Florida Press (1965) p.ix.
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