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Bishop Wareing

William Wareing
Bishop of Northampton
Diocese Northampton
See Northampton
Appointed 29 September 1850
Term ended 24 January 1858
Predecessor None
Successor Francis Kerril Amherst
Other posts Titular Bishop of Rhithymna
Orders
Ordination 28 September 1815
Consecration 21 September 1840
by Thomas Walsh
Personal details
Born (1791-02-14)14 February 1791
London, United Kingdom
Died 26 December 1865(1865-12-26) (aged 74)
Buried East Bergholt, Suffolk, United Kingdom
Nationality British
Denomination Roman Catholic
Previous post
  • Vicar Apostolic of Eastern District (1840-1850)
  • Titular Bishop of Areopolis (1840-1850)

Bishop William Wareing was the first Roman Catholic Bishop of the Diocese of Northampton.

Born 14 February 1791 at Lincoln's Inn Fields, London, and after studying at Oscott College, William Wareing was ordained as a Catholic priest on 28 September 1815, aged 24, by Bishops Thomas Walsh, Nicholas Wiseman (later Cardinal Wiseman) and George Hilary Brown.

He worked first on the mission at Moseley, then at Creswell, Staffordshire, until in 1831 when he moved to Grantham in Lincolnshire. In 1833 he moved on to Stamford where he was the town's first properly resident parish priest (or "missionary rector", as they were then called) since the English Reformation. There, he was at least in part responsible for the erection of the new Catholic chapel, a small Gothic building, in 1834, when it was one of only seven Catholic chapels across the whole of Lincolnshire. In 1838, Wareing was appointed one of three "Grand Vicars" for the Midland District and was consecrated as the titular bishop in partibus of Areopolis (an ancient diocese in Palestine long since lost to the Church). More significantly, in 1840, he was appointed as Vicar Apostolic of the newly established Eastern District, which comprised the nine counties of Lincolnshire, Rutland, Huntingdonshire, Northamptonshire, Cambridgeshire, Norfolk, Suffolk, Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire. He selected Northampton as the seat of the Vicars Apostolic, and subsequently the Roman Catholic Bishops of Northampton.


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