David Buel Knickerbacker Explained

Type:Bishop
Honorific-Prefix:The Right Reverend
David Knickerbacker
Honorific-Suffix:D.D.
Bishop of Indiana
Church:Episcopal Church
Diocese:Indiana
Elected:1883
Term:1883–1894
Predecessor:Joseph Cruickshank Talbot
Successor:John Hazen White
Ordination:July 12, 1857
Ordained By:Jackson Kemper
Consecration:October 14, 1883
Consecrated By:Arthur Cleveland Coxe
Birth Date:24 February 1833
Birth Place:Schaghticoke, New York, United States
Buried:Crown Hill Cemetery
Parents:Herman Knickerbocker & Mary Delia Buell
Spouse:Sarah M. Moore
Children:2
Alma Mater:Trinity College, Hartford
Signature:Signature of David Buel Knickerbacker.png

David Buel Knickerbacker (February 24, 1833 – December 31, 1894), was an American Episcopal clergyman who in 1883 became the fourth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Indiana and 130th bishop in the line of succession in the American episcopate.

Early life and education

Born on February 24, 1833, at Schaghticoke, Rensselaer County, New York, he was the son of Mary Delia (Buell) Knickerbocker and her husband Herman Knickerbocker, a lawyer and former Congressman from New York. David Buel Knickerbocker was educated at Trinity College, Hartford and the General Theological Seminary in New York City.[1]

Ministry

Soon after his graduation from seminary in 1856 he went as a missionary to Minneapolis Minnesota, then a village of three hundred people, and remained there 27 years, during which time he did much to direct its growth. He built three churches there, including Gethsemane Episcopal Church, and five in its outlying districts. He founded Cottage Hospital (1870), the first hospital in the city of Minneapolis, which was moved and renamed St. Barnabas Hospital (1871–1991),[2] which ultimately was closed and sold in 1991 to Hennepin County Medical Center,[3] and the Sheltering Arms Hospital. In 1877 he was elected missionary bishop of New Mexico and Arizona but declined.[1]

After becoming the fourth bishop of Indiana in 1883, he founded a boarding school for boys at Turner and another for girls in Indianapolis and secured $25,000 toward an endowment for the Diocese of Indiana. He also founded the Church Worker, a monthly publication of which he was editor. He received the honorary degree of Doctor of Divinity from Trinity College in 1871.[4]

Family

He was married to Sarah (Moore) Knickerbocker in Brooklyn, New York, in the summer of 1856. They had two children. Their daughter died of illness in Minneapolis in 1865, at the age of seven, and their son David was killed when attempting to jump on railcars at the St. Paul & Pacific depot in the fall of 1866. Bishop Knickerbacker died December 31, 1894, in Indianapolis and was buried next to his wife in Crown Hill Cemetery.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans . VI . Rossiter . Johnson . John Howard . Brown . The Biographical Society . Boston . . 1904 . 2022-05-03 . Internet Archive.
  2. Web site: Clinical & Health Affairs.
  3. Web site: Hennepin County Library - A History of Minneapolis . October 17, 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120421141908/http://www.hclib.org/pub/search/specialcollections/mplshistory/?id=31 . April 21, 2012 .
  4. https://books.google.com/books?id=TWY3AAAAMAAJ&dq=David+Buel+Knickerbacker&pg=PA332 A sketch-book of the American episcopate during one hundred years, 1783-1883
  5. News: The Bishop is Dead: The Rt. Rev. David Buel Knickerbacker Suddenly Expires . . 8 . 1895-01-01 . 2022-05-03 . Newspapers.com.