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A Case Without Parallel: The Bishops of London and the Anglican Church Overseas, 1660–1748

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2009

Geoffrey Yeo Esq.
Affiliation:
Archives Department, St Bartholomew's Hospital,West Smithfield, London ECIA 7BE

Extract

‘For a bishop to live at one end of the world, and his Church at the other, must make the office very uncomfortable to the bishop, and in a great measure useless to the people.’ This was the verdict of Thomas Sherlock, bishop of London from 1748 to 1761, on the provision which had been made by the Church of England for the care of its congregations overseas. No Anglican bishopric existed outside the British Isles, but a limited form of responsibility for the Church overseas was exercised by the see of London. In the time of Henry Compton, bishop from 1675 to 1713, Anglican churches in the American colonies, in India and in European countrieshad all sought guidance from the bishop of London. By the 1740s the European connection had been severed; the bishop still accepted some colonial responsibilities but the arrangement was seen as anomalous by churchmen on both sides of the Atlantic. A three-thousand-mile voyage separated the colonists from their bishop, and those wishing to seek ordination could not do so unless they were prepared to cross the ocean. Although the English Church claimed that the episcopate was an essential part of church order, no Anglican bishop had ever visited America, confirmation had never been administered, and no church building in the colonies had been validly consecrated. While a Roman Catholic bishopric was established in French Canada at an early date, the Anglican Church overseas had no resident bishops until the end of the eighteenth century. In the words of Archbishop Thomas Seeker, this was ‘a case which never had its parallel before in the Christian world’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1993

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References

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6 In 1986 when Bishop Graham Leonard gave his support to the deposed parish priest of St Michael's, Tulsa, Oklahoma, he emphasised his view that the overseas jurisdiction of the bishop of London was ‘a matter of legal debate both with regard to its origin and to its subsequent history’, and for this reason made no claim to be acting in virtue of it: Peart-Binns, J. S., Graham Leonard, Bishop of London, London 1988, 198Google Scholar. For earlier studies of the subject see, e.g., Cross, A. L., The Anglican Episcopate and the American Colonies, New York 1902CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and Manross, W. W., The Fulham Papers in the Lambeth Palace Library, Oxford 1965Google Scholar.

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78 Pearson, J. B., A Biographical Sketch of the Chaplains to the Levant Company, Cambridge 1883, 10Google Scholar; LPL, SPG Papers, ix. 34. One Russia Company chaplain obtained the bishop's licence on 1 June 1717 (GL, MS 9540/9, unfoliated), but this did not become established practice. The company maintained its independence from episcopal authority until 1866 (Ibid. MS 11749/2, nos 344, 353).

79 LPL, Fulham Papers, Gibson, ii. 78; GL, MS 9540/2, passim; Shaw, J., Charters relating to the East India Company 1600–1761, Madras 1887, 143, 185Google Scholar. LPL, Fulham Papers, xlii. 33 is a list of East India licences issued by Gibson between 1725 and 1742.

80 Besides the older churches at Hamburg, Lisbon and Oporto, there were Anglican chaplaincies founded in 1698 at Rotterdam and Amsterdam, where licensing by the bishop remained normal practice until the end of Robinson's episcopate: GL, MS 9540/9, passim; Loosjes, J., History of Christ Church (English Episcopal Church) Amsterdam, 1698–1932, Amsterdam 1932, 147–17Google Scholar. Only in the churches at Danzig and Leghorn, both established in 1706, did the clergy have no licence from the bishop of London. At Leghorn the first chaplains were recommended by the archbishop of Canterbury and licensed by the crown: Anderson, , The Church of England in the Colonies, iii. 82, 86Google Scholar. There is no record of an episcopal licence for either Leghorn or Danzig in the bishop's subscription book for 1706 (GL, MS 9540/7), but a crown licence for Leghorn is in BL, MS Add. 38889, fo. 130V.

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82 An example had been set by Basil Kennett, the first chaplain at Leghorn, who was the subject of violent attacks by the Roman Catholic population. Kennett had a licence from Queen Anne, and the future of the chaplaincy was secured by a despatch from the British government, that the queen would regard any harm to the chaplain as an affront to herself and that military force would be used if necessary to obtain satisfaction: Anderson, , The Church of England in the Colonies, iii. 82–3Google Scholar.

83 LPL, Fulham Papers, Gibson, ii. 15; Fulham Papers, Sherlock, iii. 8–39.

84 In the event, a few candidates with a title to a European chaplaincy still came to London for ordination, and occasionally a chaplain in difficulty sought the bishop's help (Ibid. Fulham Papers, xii. 203–4; Fulham Papers, Gibson, ii. 18–19; Fulham Papers, Lowth, ii. 204–24); but no European licences are mentioned in the episcopal records between 1720 and 1815, when Bishop Howley resumed licensing (GL, MS 9532A/2, 95).

85 LPL, Fulham Papers, xv. 139–48, 217–32; Bennett, , ‘English bishops and imperial jurisdiction’, 183–4Google Scholar.

86 LPL, Fulham Papers, xxxvi. 61–2, 111–12.

87 Sykes, , Edmund Gibson, 334Google Scholar, from Gibson MSS formerly in St Paul's cathedral library; LPL, Fulham Papers, xxxvi. 62; Fulham Papers, Gibson, ii. 79. For Gibson's colonial ordinations and licences before the grant of his patent see GL, MS 9540/10, passim.

88 Acts of the Privy Council, Colonial Series 1720–45, no. 74; LPL, Fulham Papers, xxxvi. 63–89, 111–12; Fulham Papers, Gibson, ii. 79–80; Sykes, , Edmund Gibson, 336–7Google Scholar; LPL, MS 2589. 67–74.

89 Ibid. 1–5.

90 Cross, , The Anglican Episcopate, 289–93Google Scholar. The clauses about the morals of parish clerks were also omitted from the second patent.

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93 LPL, Fulham Papers, ix. 268–9; x. 28–31, 62–3, 134–5.

94 Ibid. xii. 3, 259–60.

95 Ibid. iii. 134–41, 191–2, 197–8; vii. 314–15; xvii. 147, 207–8; xviii. 53–4.

96 In 1743 Gibson announced that he would not ordain anyone from the colonies without such a testimonial: ibid, xxxvi. 131.

97 Thus in 1736 William Currie was made deacon on 17 Sept., ordained priest on 29 Sept., and licensed to serve in Pennsylvania on 1 Oct. (GL, MS 9540/10, fos 218–19). Later in the century the interval of a year or so became more usual: Manross, , The Fulham Papers, 298Google Scholar.

98 Seeker, T., A Letter to the Right Honourable Horatio Walpole Esq., London 1769, 34Google Scholar; Porteus, , Life of Thomas Seeker, 61Google Scholar.

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104 BL, MSS Add. 32719, fo. 97; 35590, fo. 208. Sherlock's refusal may also have been an attempt to force the government to appoint colonial bishops: cf. Ibid. 32719, fo. 113, where Sherlock avows that it would be ‘the glory of my life’ if he could be ‘the instrument of…putting the Church abroad upon a true and primitive foot’.

105 LPL, Fulham Papers, xxxvi. 72–3. In the preamble to Gibson's patent the king declared that the jurisdiction ‘nobis ut Supremo Ecclesiae in terris Capiti solummodo spectat’ (Ibid. MS 2589, 1).

106 GL, MSS 9531/17, fo. 10; 9540/2, fo. 9, 30 Oct. 1677; LPL, Fulham Papers, xxxvi. 48–9. Before Compton's time Peter Heylyn had stated that English churches in Holland and other foreign countries were part of the diocese of London (Heylyn, , Cyprianus Anglicus, 276)Google Scholar. The claim could still be maintained in 1690 (PRO, CO 5/1305, fo. 96); but in 1748 Sherlock insisted that ‘the plantations are no part of the diocese’ (BL, MS Add. 35590, fo. 208).

107 LPL, Fulham Papers, xx. 202–3.