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Daniel Sylvester Tuttle


Daniel Sylvester Tuttle (January 26, 1837 – April 17, 1923) was consecrated a bishop of the Episcopal Church in 1866. His first assignment was as Bishop of Montana, a missionary field that included Montana, Utah, and Idaho.

He was born on January 26, 1837 and graduated from an academy in Delhi, New York in 1850. Bishop Wainwright confirmed him in the Episcopal Church shortly before he entered what was then Columbia College. After graduating in 1857, Tuttle attended the General Theological Seminary and graduated in 1862.

He married the former Harriet Minerva Foote, of Greene County, New York and the couple had many children before her death in St. Louis, Missouri in 1899 during one of her husband's missionary journeys.

Rev. Tuttle was ordained deacon by year's end and in 1863 was ordained priest and assigned rural parishes. He learned he had been elected missionary bishop of the territory of Montana, with additional jurisdiction over Utah and Idaho. Presiding Bishop John Henry Hopkins of Vermont, along with bishops Horatio Potter of New York and William Henry Odenheimer of New Jersey consecrated their young colleague. Since Tuttle was then only 29, canon law required him to wait until he was thirty before he could exercise his office. He took the Union Pacific Railroad as far west as then possible, to North Platte, Nebraska, then boarded a stage coach for Denver, Colorado and arrived on June 11, 1867. He eventually established his home base in Salt Lake City, but traveled widely, by railroad and other means. In 1880 Montana was removed from his mission, leaving him with Utah and Idaho. In 1886 the General Convention added territory in Nevada, since the missionary bishop of Nevada and Arizona, Rt.Rev. Ozi William Whitaker had translated and become bishop of Pennsylvania. Instead, Rt. Rev. Tuttle accepted a call to serve as bishop of Missouri, although he had rejected a similar offer in 1868.


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