William David Walker

The Right Reverend
William David Walker
First Missionary Bishop of North Dakota, 1883-1896

Bishop Walker
Province The Episcopal Church
Diocese Missionary District of North Dakota
Installed as Bishop of Western New York on December 23, 1896
Term ended by death on May 2, 1917
Predecessor Arthur Cleveland Coxe
Successor Charles Brent
Orders
Consecration December 20, 1883
Personal details
Born June 29, 1839
New York City
Died May 2, 1917
Buffalo, New York

William David Walker was consecrated as the first Missionary Bishop of the Episcopal Church’s Missionary District of North Dakota on December 20, 1883.[1] He became the third Bishop of Western New York in 1897 and held this position until his death in 1917. [2]

Early life and education

Walker was born in New York on June 29, 1839.[3] He graduated from Columbia University and the General Theological Seminary.[4]

Ministry

During his ministry, Walker held three positions: Vicar of Calvary Chapel. New York City, 1862-1883; First Missionary Bishop of North Dakota, 1883-1896; Third Bishop of Western New York, 1896-1917.[5]

First Missionary Bishop of North Dakota

Walker was consecrated as the first Missionary Bishop of the Missionary District of North Dakota on December 20, 1883 in Calvary Church, New York.[6]

When Walker came to North Dakota, the district consisted of “eighteen churches, and about thirty-five missions.” In the missions, worship services were being held in space that could be found. Walker noticed that dozens of hamlets could be reached by railroad. In some of them there was no space large enough for a congregation of twenty people.[7]

Cathedral car

Walker sought an answer to this lack of worship space. Having learned about a Russian Orthodox chapel car which was used on the Trans-Siberian Railway, Walker decided to procure a similar car to provide a place for worship in the many places on the railroads where there was no church building. Walker also “felt that to erect churches in towns, until their stability was assured, would be a waste of capital.” He implemented his plan by first raising the cost from friends back east and, then, contracting with the Pullman Palace Car Company to build it. The chapel car could seat eighty persons on portable chairs. The words "The Church of the Advent" and "The Cathedral Car of North Dakota" were painted on the sides of the car.[8]

The railroads took the Cathedral Car to the various hamlets. The bishop would have placards announcing its coming and the time of worship posted before he arrived. This pattern was followed across North Dakota. The Cathedral Car covered seventy thousand square miles.[9] Often, the Cathedral Car could not accommodate all the people who wanted to attend worship, so there had to be “multiple services.”[10] Besides regular worship, there were marriages and funerals.[11]

People in the hamlets were impressed by “compactness, dignity, and simple churchly beauty” of the Chapel Car. They were also impressed by Walker what did. He lived in the car, did his own cooking, and cleaned both his living quarters and the chapel. Often he was the organist for services.[12]

After Walker left, the Cathedral Car was sold and scrapped in 1901. Its material and furnishing were used by various stationary churches in the district.[13]

After Walker accepted his call to serve as Diocesan Bishop of the Diocese of Western New York in 1896, his successor Bishop James Dow Morrison praised Walker’s missionary work, but he expressed dismay over Walker’s decision to use funds for the Cathedral Car rather than for traditional buildings.[14]

Bishop of Western New York

On October 6, 1896, a special convention of the Diocese of Western New York met for the election of a new bishop. Walker was elected.[15]

Walker was “enthroned as Bishop of Western New York on December 23, 1896."[16] He was the third Bishop of the Diocese, and he held this position until his death in 1917.[17]

Characteristics as bishop

As a Bishop, Walker controlled his clergy “with an iron hand.”[18] In contrast to his successor Charles Brent, who labored for Christian unity, Walker opposed association with other Christian denominations.[19] In his address to the 1914 Convention of the Diocese of Western New York, in the section on “Christian Unity,” Walker said, “in my opinion while divided Christendom remains, separated sects are better apart—each peaceably working out its own salvation.”[20]

Walker was noted for his “frankness and simplicity,” and he was known as “a workhorse.” His report to the May 1898 Diocesan Convention included 1494 confirmations, three priests and seven deacons ordained. When he made his parish visitations, he met with the parish vestries. These meetings gave Walker “a good overall perspective of the Diocese.”[21]

During the first seven years of Walker’s episcopacy, parishes increased from 126 to 151 and the number of communicants increased from 19,000 to 23,000. The number of clergy rose from 120 to 128. Missionary offerings tripled.[22]

Walker was a “staunch conservative.” He opposed giving women a vote in parish elections.[23] As another example of Walker’s conservative proclivity, deposed the Rev. Algernon Sidney Crapsey on December 4, 1906. Crapsey had been charged, tried and convicted for heresy. The charge was based on Crapsey’s 1905 book Religion and Politics. In the book he urged the church to work for social reform. He also questioned traditional interpretations of the Trinity and the Virgin Birth.[24]

Honors

Walker received two honorary degrees: Doctor of Divinity (D.D.) and Doctor of Laws (LL.D.).[25]

Death

While still Bishop of Western New York, after a “brief illness,” Walker died at his home on May 2, 1917.[26]

The Annual Council of the Diocese met on May 15 fewer than two weeks after Walker’s death. At the Council, the Standing Committee of the Diocese unanimously adopted a minute extolling Walker’s service. The minute ended with these words: “he faithfully served the Church to which he adhered and never failed in his fidelity and energy to work for those things which he believed were for the ultimate good of the Church. The labors of the last week of his life proved his fidelity, interest and energy, and hastened his call to the Life Eternal.”[27]

Works

Comfort and Counsel: Sermons by the Late Right Reverend William David Walker (Buffalo, N. Y.: Baker, Jones, and Co., 1918). The sermons were compiled by Walker’s wife.

References

  1. “The Missionary Episcopate.” Retrieved November 15, 2016.
  2. “A Short History of the Church of St. Luke & St. Simon Cyrene” Retrieved November 15, 2016.
  3. The Cornell Daily Sun, Volume XXXVII, Number 149, 3 May 1917
  4. The Cornell Daily Sun, Volume XXXVII, Number 149, 3 May 1917
  5. Comfort and Counsel: Sermons by the Late Right Reverend William David Walker (Buffalo, N. Y.: Baker, Jones, and Co., 1918), Frontispiece.
  6. “The Missionary Episcopate.” Retrieved November 15, 2016.
  7. “Bishop Walker’s Church of the Advent Cathedral Car of North Dakota” (Judson Press, 1999), 3.
  8. “Cathedral Car” from An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church, A User Friendly Reference for Episcopalians, Don S. Armentrout and Robert Boak Slocum, editors. and “Bishop Walker’s Church of the Advent Cathedral Car of North Dakota” (Judson Press, 1999), 6.
  9. “Bishop Walker’s Church of the Advent Cathedral Car of North Dakota” (Judson Press, 1999), 6.
  10. “The Cathedral Car of North Dakota.”
  11. “Bishop Walker’s Church of the Advent Cathedral Car of North Dakota” (Judson Press, 1999), 10.
  12. “Bishop Walker’s Church of the Advent Cathedral Car of North Dakota” (Judson Press, 1999), 7.
  13. “Bishop Walker’s Church of the Advent Cathedral Car of North Dakota” (Judson Press, 1999), 4, 12. and “Cathedral Car” from An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church, A User Friendly Reference for Episcopalians, Don S. Armentrout and Robert Boak Slocum, editors.
  14. “Bishop Walker’s Church of the Advent Cathedral Car of North Dakota” (Judson Press, 1999), 10.
  15. Laurie Wozniak, Nine Bishops of Western New York (1997)
  16. William S. Beard, Church of St. James the Greater: 1874-1924 (July 1924), 4.
  17. “A Short History of the Church of St. Luke & St. Simon Cyrene” Retrieved November 15, 2016.
  18. Review of G. Sherman Burrows The Diocese of Western New York, 1897-1931 by E. Clowes Chorley in the Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church Vol. 5, No. 1 (MARCH, 1936), 71.
  19. Review of G. Sherman Burrows The Diocese of Western New York, 1897-1931 by E. Clowes Chorley in the Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church Vol. 5, No. 1 (MARCH, 1936), 71.
  20. Journal of the Proceedings of the Annual Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Western New York, Volumes 77-79 (The Diocese, 1914), 63.
  21. Laurie Wozniak, Nine Bishops of Western New York (1997)
  22. Laurie Wozniak, Nine Bishops of Western New York (1997)
  23. Laurie Wozniak, Nine Bishops of Western New York (1997)
  24. “Crapsey, Algernon Sidney” in An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church: A User-Friendly Reference for Episcopalians (Church Publishing, Inc., 1999). 129.
  25. The Cornell Daily Sun, Volume XXXVII, Number 149 (May 3, 1917), 6.
  26. The Cornell Daily Sun, Volume XXXVII, Number 149 (May 3, 1917), 6. and William S. Beard, Church of St. James the Greater: 1874-1924 (July 1924), 4.
  27. Journal of the Eightieth Annual Council of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Western New York.
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