Edward R. Welles II explained

Type:Bishop
Honorific Prefix:The Right Reverend
Edward Randolph Welles II
Bishop of West Missouri
Church:Episcopal Church
Diocese:West Missouri
Elected:December 6, 1949
Term:1950-1972
Retired:-->
Predecessor:Robert Nelson Spencer
Successor:Arthur A. Vogel
Ordination:April 1931 (deacon)
October 1931 (priest)
Ordained By:Paul Matthews
Consecration:April 19, 1950
Consecrated By:Henry Knox Sherrill
Birth Date:20 April 1907
Birth Place:Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Death Place:Kansas City, Missouri, United States
Religion:Anglican
Parents:Samuel Gardner Welles & Mabel De Geer
Spouse:

Children:4
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Edward Randolph Welles II (April 20, 1907 – April 15, 1991) was the fourth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of West Missouri, serving from 1950 to 1972.

Early life and education

Welles was born on April 20, 1907, in Cincinnati, Ohio, the son of the Reverend Samuel Gardner Welles and Mabel De Geer. His grandfather was the Bishop of Milwaukee Edward R. Welles. He was educated at Kent School and later studied at Princeton University from where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1928. He then undertook studies at the University of Oxford from where he earned a Bachelor of Arts in 1930, and a Master of Arts in 1934. He also attended the General Theological Seminary from where he graduated with a Bachelor of Sacred Theology in 1932. He was awarded a Doctor of Sacred Theology from General in 1950, and a Doctor of Divinity from Nashotah House and Missouri Valley College, respectively and both in 1950.[1]

Ordained ministry

Welles was ordained as a deacon in April 1931 and as a priest in October 1931 by Bishop of New Jersey Paul Matthews. He served as the rector of Trinity Church in Woodbridge, New Jersey, between 1931 and 1934. He was also the chaplain at St Mark's School in Southborough, Massachusetts, from 1934 until 1936. He then was elected dean of All Saints Cathedral in Albany and in 1940 became rector of Christ Church in Alexandria, Virginia. In 1944, he was then elected as the dean of St Paul's Cathedral in Buffalo, New York, where he remained until 1950.[2]

Bishop

On December 6, 1949, Welles was elected as the forth Bishop of West Missouri and was consecrated on April 19, 1950, in Grace and Holy Trinity Cathedral by Presiding Bishop Henry Knox Sherrill.[3] During his episcopacy the number of communicants in his diocese increased, and 12 new congregations were created. He was president of the board directors at Saint Luke's Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri, between 1950 and 1969, and then chairman of the Board from 1969 until 1972. He retired as Bishop of West Missouri in 1972. Between 1973 and 1990, he served as Assistant Bishop in Maine. He died quietly in his sleep on April 15, 1991, at his home in Kansas City, Missouri.[4]

He was a pioneer for supporting the ordination of women. It was in 1974, that he joined two other retired bishops in the first ordination of female priests in The Episcopal Church.[5] [6]

Family

Welles married three times. First to Catharine Van Alstyne on June 2, 1931, who died in 1983, and had four children. He then married Martha Borland Willis on January 23, 1984, but who died shortly after in April 1984. Finally he married Ferne Bingham Malcolm on November 2, 1984.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Morehouse, Linden . The Living Church Annual: the Yearbook of the Episcopal Church . Bishops Consecrated in 1950 . New York . Morehouse-Gorham Company . 7 . 1951 . 7000417.
  2. News: . December 7, 1949 . West Missouri Bishop Elected . 29 . . The Rev. Edward Randolph Welles, 42 years old, dean of St. Paul's Cathedral in Buffalo, was named Bishop of the West Missouri Diocese.
  3. News: . April 20, 1950 . Episcopal Bishop Consecrated . 38 . . The Very Rev. Edward Randolph Welles today was consecrated Bishop of the West Missouri Episcopal Diocese..
  4. Web site: Memorial: Edward Randolph Welles ’28 . . 1991 . Princeton Alumni Weekly . Princeton University.
  5. News: The Associated Press . 11 Women May Be Ordained as Priests . . July 20, 1974 . 29 . Three Episcopal bishops disclosed plans yesterday to ordain 11 women as priests in defiance of the church's laws and practice..
  6. Book: Hein . David . Shattuck . Gardiner . 2004 . The Episcopalians . New York . Church Publishing . 9780898694970 . 141.