Andy Radford Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Reverend
Andy Radford
Bishop of Taunton
Church:Church of England
Diocese:Diocese of Bath and Wells
Term:3 December 1998–21 May 2006 (died in office)
Predecessor:Will Stewart
Successor:Peter Maurice
Other Post:Development and Training Officer, national
Archbishops' Adviser for Bishops' Ministry (1998)
Ordination:1974 (deacon); 1975 (priest)
Consecration:3 December 1998
Consecrated By:George Carey
Birth Date:26 January 1944
Birth Place:Hengrove, Bristol,
Death Place:Gloucester, Glos., UK
Nationality:British
Religion:Anglican
Parents:John (priest & canon)
Children:2 daughters
Profession:religious broadcaster
Alma Mater:Trinity College, Bristol

Andrew John "Andy" Radford[1] 26 January 194421 May 2006) was an Anglican Evangelical bishop and religious broadcaster. He served the Church of England as Bishop of Taunton from 1998 until his death eight years later.[2]

Radford was born at Hengrove, where his father was curate; they later lived in Kingswood, Bristol, where his father, John (later a canon),[3] was Vicar, and Andy attended Kingswood Grammar School. After school, he served local government and trained as an architect and surveyor. In 1972, he entered Trinity College, Bristol, to train for the ministry; ordained[4] a deacon on 29 September 1974 and a priest on 21 September 1975 (both times by Oliver Tomkins, Bishop of Bristol, in Bristol Cathedral), his career began with a curacy at Shirehampton after which he was a producer of Religious programmes for the BBC.

Subsequently Vicar of St Barnabas with Englishcombe, Bath, Somerset (1980–1985), then Diocese of Gloucester Communications Officer (1985–1993) and an honorary canon of Gloucester Cathedral (1991–1998), then Development and Training Officer at the national Communications Unit, Church House, Westminster (1993–1998). He served briefly as the Archbishops' Adviser for Bishops' Ministry in 1998 before his appointment that year to serve the Diocese of Bath and Wells as suffragan Bishop of Taunton. He was ordained and consecrated a bishop on 3 December 1998, by George Carey, Archbishop of Canterbury, at Southwark Cathedral. He died of brain cancer in Gloucester and was survived by Christine née Davis, whom he had married in 1969, and their two daughters and two grandchildren.

References

  1. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1519203/The-Right-Reverend-Andrew-Radford.html The Telegraph — Obituaries — Andrew Radford (24 May 2006)
  2. http://www.pm.gov.uk/output/Page10135.asp 10 Downing Street — Nomination of the Suffragan See of Taunton
  3. http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/opinion/obituaries/article2078035.ece The Times obituary
  4. Crockford's Clerical Directory 1975/1976 London: Oxford University Press, 1976