*** Welcome to piglix ***

Aubrey George Spencer

Aubrey George Spencer
Bishop of Jamaica
Aubrey George Spencer lithograph coat of arms.jpg
A lithograph of Spencer, with his coat of arms
Church modern day Church in the Province of the West Indies
See Jamaica
In office 1843–1855
Orders
Ordination 1819
Personal details
Born 12 February 1795
London, England
Died 24 February 1872 (1872-02-25) (aged 77)
Torquay, Devon, England.
Previous post Newfoundland and Bermuda

Bishop Aubrey George Spencer (12 February 1795 – 24 February 1872) was the first bishop of the Anglican Diocese of Newfoundland and Bermuda (1839–1843). He was also bishop of Jamaica. His brother George Spencer became Bishop of Madras. He is from the Spencer family.

Aubrey George Spencer was born in London, England on February 12, 1795. He was the son of William Spencer (1769–1834), younger son of Lord Charles Spencer, and a great-grandson of Charles Spencer, 3rd Duke of Marlborough; his German mother Susan being a Countess of the Holy Roman Empire.

Spencer was educated at St Albans School, and privately in Greenwich prior to joining the navy. His health failed him and he was discharged and decided to become a priest. Spencer went to study at Magdalen Hall, Oxford and was made deacon in 1818. He was ordained a priest in 1819 by the Bishop of Norwich. Spencer's first assignment was officiating as a curate at Prittlewell, Essex, before becoming a Society for the Propagation of the Gospel missionary to Newfoundland. There he served at Ferryland and Trinity Bay before the cold undermined his health and he moved to Bermuda.

Having been appointed Archdeacon and Rector of Paget and Warwick, he published a collection of his sermons, acquired a Lambeth D.D. and turned down in 1829 the offer of the Archdeaconry of Newfoundland. In 1839, he readily accepted when, perhaps helped by his aristocratic and Whig connections, he was offered the bishopric of Newfoundland. He was consecrated Bishop of Newfoundland, alongside John Strachan, who was the first Bishop of Toronto, Ontario. Their consecration took place at the chapel in Lambeth Palace of August 4, 1839. William Howley, being archbishop of Canterbury, with Bishops Charles James Blomfield of London, William Otter of Chichester, and John Inglis of Nova Scotia participated in Spencer's consecration.


...
Wikipedia

...