Francis Fulford (bishop)

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Francis Fulford
Francis Fulford, by William Notman, 1861
Denomination Anglican Church of Canada
Senior posting
See Montreal
Title Bishop of Montreal
Period in office 1850—1868
Consecration 25 July 1850
Predecessor none
Successor Ashton Oxenden
Personal
Date of birth 3 June 1803
Place of birth Sidmouth
Date of death 9 September 1868
Place of death Montreal

Francis Fulford, DD (3 June 18039 September 1868) was an Anglo-Catholic bishop of Montreal.

Contents

[edit] Early years

Fulford, second son of Baldwin Fulford of Fulford Magna, Devonshire, by Anna Maria, eldest daughter of William Adams, M.P. for Totnes, was born at Sidmouth 3 June 1803, and baptised at Dunsford, 14 October 1804. He was educated at Tiverton grammar school, whence he matriculated at Oxford from Exeter College 1 February 1821, and was elected a fellow of his college 30 June 1824, but vacated his fellowship 18 October 1830 by marrying Mary, eldest daughter of Andrew Berkeley Drummond of Cadlands, Hampshire. Fulford proceeded B.A. in 1827, and M.A. 1838, and was created an honorary D.D. 6 July 1850.[1]

He was ordained a deacon in 1826, and became curate of Holne, Devonshire, afterwards removing to the curacy of Fawley. The Duke of Rutland instituted him to the rectory of Trowbridge, Wiltshire, in 1832, where he resided for ten years, and as a justice of the peace as well as a clergyman commanded respect and conciliated goodwill. In 1842 he accepted the rectory of Croydon, Cambridgeshire, which he held until 1845, when he was nominated by Earl Howe as minister of Curzon Chapel, Mayfair, London.[1]

[edit] Life as a missionary

On the projection of the Colonial Church Chronicle and Missionary Journal in 1848 he was chosen editor, and in this way acquired a knowledge of the condition of the colonial church. On 19 July 1850 he was gazetted the first bishop of the new diocese of Montreal, Canada, and consecrated in Westminster Abbey on 25 July. He landed at St. John's on 12 September and was enthroned in Christ Church Cathedral, Montreal, on 15 September. In the following month he was actively at work, and the church society of the diocese of Montreal was organised. On 20 January 1852 the primary visitation was held, when he won great respect from all parties by his declaration that the church of England in Canada, politically considered, "exists but as one of many religious bodies." Montreal was next mapped out into ecclesiastical boundaries, and each district thus divided was set apart as the conventional parish of the neighbouring church. The bishop cheerfully co-operated with all the societies that were established for benevolent, scientific, and philanthropic purposes, and wrote papers for, and delivered lectures at, mechanics' institutes and working men's clubs. On 21 May 1857 he laid the foundation-stone of his new cathedral, where on Advent Sunday, 1859, he preached the opening sermon. Unfortunately the great cost of this building involved the diocese in a heavy debt, the thought of which so preyed on the bishop's mind that he practised the utmost economy throughout the remaining years of his life in an endeavour to pay off the amount.[1]

[edit] Final years and legacy

On 9 July 1860 the queen caused letters patent to be issued promoting Fulford to the office of metropolitan of Canada and elevating the see of Montreal to the dignity of a metropolitical see, with the city of Montreal as the seat of that see, and on 10 September in the following year the first provincial synod of the united church of England and Ireland in Canada was held at Montreal. It was chiefly on the representation of the synod of Canada that the Archbishop of Canterbury held the pan-anglican synod at Lambeth 24–27 Sept. 1867, on which occasion the Bishop of Montreal visited England and took part in the proceedings. He, however, seems on this journey to have overtaxed his strength, and never afterwards had good health.[1]

He died in the see-house, Montreal, 9 September 1868, and was buried on 12 September, when the universal respect which his moderation had won for him was shown by the bell of the Roman Catholic Church being tolled as the funeral procession passed.[1]

[edit] Publications

  1. ‘A Sermon at the Visitation of Venerable L. Clarke, Archdeacon of Sarum,’ 1833.
  2. ‘A Course of Plain Sermons on the Ministry, Doctrine, and Services of the Church of England,’ 2 vols. 1837–40.
  3. ‘The Interpretation of Law and the Rule of Faith,’ an assize sermon, 1838.
  4. ‘The Progress of the Reformation in England,’ 1841.
  5. ‘A Pastoral Letter to the Clergy of the Diocese,’ 1851.
  6. ‘An Address delivered in the Chapel of the General Theological Seminary of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States,’ 1852.
  7. ‘A Charge delivered to the Clergy of the Diocese of Montreal,’ 1852.
  8. ‘The Sermon at the Consecration of H. Potter to the Episcopate,’ 1854.
  9. ‘Five Occasional Lectures delivered in Montreal,’ 1859.
  10. ‘Sermons, Addresses, and Statistics of the Diocese of Montreal,’ 1865. Fulford's latest publication was ‘A Pan-Anglican Synod: a Sermon,’ 1867.

[edit] See also

Anglican Diocese of Montreal

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e Boase, G. C. (1889). Fulford, Francis. Dictionary of National Biography vol. XX. Smith, Elder & Co.. Retrieved on 2007-11-02.

[edit] External links

Religious titles
Preceded by
none
Bishop of Montreal
1850–1868
Succeeded by
Ashton Oxenden