Thomas Parry (1795 – 16 March 1870) was a Welsh clergyman and Bishop of Barbados from 1842 to 1869.
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He was born the fourth son of Edward Parry, a clergyman in North Wales, who at that time was rector of Llanferres, Denbighshire.[1] Parry was educated at Oriel College, Oxford, matriculating in 1812 and graduating first-class in mathematics and second-class in classics four years later.[1][2] He was appointed a Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford in 1818 and obtained a Master of Arts in the following year.
Parry became Archdeacon of the West Indies in 1825 and was transferred to Barbados in 1840.[3] Two years later, he was nominated to be the second Bishop of Barbados. He held this position until 1869 when he returned to England following a breakdown in his health.
In 1824, he married Louisa, third daughter of Henry Hutton, rector of Beaumont-cum-Moze.[3] Parry died on 16 March 1870 in Malvern, Worcestershire.[1]
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Preceded by William Hart Coleridge |
Bishop of Barbados 1842 – 1869 |
Succeeded by John Mitchinson |
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