Alfred Barry

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Dr. Alfred Barry (15 January 18261 April 1910) was the Third Bishop of Sydney and founded several prominent Anglican schools.

He was the son of Charles and Sarah Barry. He had three brothers; Charles Barry (junior), Edward Middleton Barry and John Wolfe-Barry.

Bishop Alfred Barry
Bishop Alfred Barry

From King's College, London, he went to Trinity College, Cambridge (B.A., 1848; M.A., 1851), where his performance as 4th Wrangler (aeq.) and 7th Classic won him a minor fellowship and a Smith's prize. In 1850 he became a major fellow and was made deacon by Bishop Turton of Ely; Bishop Wilberforce of Oxford ordained him priest in 1853. He continued with divinity studies (B.D., 1860; D.D., 1866). Oxford gave him an honorary D.C.L. in 1870, as did Durham in 1888.[1]

He was consecrated in Westminster Abbey on 1 January 1884 by the Archbishop of Canterbury, assisted by the bishops of London, Durham, Lincoln, Rochester, Dover and Bishop Perry. On 24 April he was enthroned in St Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney, installed as bishop of Sydney and recognized as metropolitan of New South Wales and primate of the Church of England in Australia and Tasmania.

He died at Windsor and was buried in Worcester Cathedral. He was survived by his wife Louisa Victoria, daughter of Canon Hughes of Peterborough, whom he had married on 13 August 1851, and by two sons and a daughter.

[edit] Brief history

[edit] Sermons & other writings

  • Lectures on Christianity and Socialism (London, 1890)
  • He had written a well-informed biography of his father in 1867 and defended his designs for the Palace of Westminster against the supporters of Augustus Welby Pugin in 1868.
  • In 1881 he edited the architectural lectures of his eldest brother, Edward Middleton.
  • As late as 1908 he published four lectures for St George's Chapel entitled Do we Believe?
  • Published Introduction to the Old Testament, Notes on the Gospels; Notes on the Catechism; The Teacher's Prayer Book as well as various volumes of Sermons. Contributed to Smith's Dictionary of the Bible.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Alfred Barry Biography

Julian, John (June, 1907). A Dictionary of Hymnology. London: John Murray, 115.