Benjamin Brewster

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Benjamin Brewster (November 25, 1860 - 2 February 1941), Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Maine and Missionary Bishop of Western Colorado.

He was born in New Haven, Connecticut, the son of Joseph Brewster and Sarah Jane Bunce. After graduating with a B.A. in 1882 from Yale University, where he was a member of Skull & Bones, and then he received his B.D. in 1886 from the General Theological Seminary, New York City. Meanwhile, he taught school in Cleveland, Ohio, during 1882-1883.

He was ordained deacon in the Episcopal Church in 1886 and priest in 1887. His first charge was as assistant to Henry Yates Satterlee (his first wife's first cousin) at Calvary Church, New York City, from 1886-1891, and he also served as Vicar of Calvary Church during 1887-1891. In the next four years he was pastor at that Church of the Holy Communion, South Orange, New Jersey, and during 1895-1906 was pastor at Grace Church, Colorado Springs, Colorado. In addition he was a member of the standing committee of the Diocese of Colorado from 1897-1906 and examining chaplain from 1900-1906. During the next three years he was Dean of St. Mark's Cathedral, Salt Lake City, Utah, and president of the council of advice for the District of Salt Lake.

On June 17, 1909, he was consecrated Missionary Bishop of Western Colorado. He was consecrated Bishop of the Diocese of Maine on June 7, 1916. Brewster announced in May 1940, that he would retire at the end of the year as Bishop because of his age, but his successor had not been named and he was serving in the capacity of Bishop emeritus at the time of his death.

The church in Maine had a steady growth during his bishopric and reached into more communities. Prominent in church affairs outside his diocese, Brewster served as president of the Synod of New England during 1933-1939 and as vice-president of the Church League for Industrial Democracy from 1916-1941. He was chairman of the joint committee of Bishops and clerical and lay deputies on nominations at the General Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church, Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1937, and was a commissioner of the World Council of Churches.

In his first year in Maine he was a delegate to the neutral conference committee that met with Woodrow Wilson to discuss the possibility of calling a conference of neutral nations to halt World War I. In 1936 he presented a resolution to the House of Bishops of the Protestant Episcopal Church requesting Franklin D. Roosevelt to call an international conference of nations which had signed the Kellogg-Briand Peace Pact. In 1921 and again in 1930 he attended the Lambeth Conference, London, England. He was known as a liberal in economics and politics as well as religion. In 1934 he worked in favor of a measure endorsing efforts to obtain for physicians and medical clinics the legal right to disseminate birth control information and the measure passed the House of Bishops by a vote of 44 to 38.

Brewster married on June 10, 1891, in New York City, as his first wife Stella Yates (November 23, 1866 - February 2, 1929), daughter of Charles Yates and Josephine Bosworth, by whom he had five children. He married on August 25, 1937, in Portland, Maine, Maine, as his second wife Mary Phillips (February 11, 1884 - 1941), widow of George Guillifer Hay, and daughter of Charles Leonard Phillips, by whom he had no children. Benjamin Brewster died in Portland, Maine.

[edit] References

The National Cyclopædia of American Biography, Volume 44. New York: James T. White & Company (1962) 478-479.