James Gordon (bishop of Jarrow) explained

Type:Bishop
James Gordon
Bishop of Jarrow
Church:Church of England
Appointed:-->
Term:1932–1938
Birth Name:James Geoffrey Gordon
Birth Date:11 December 1881
Death Place:United Kingdom
Tomb:-->
Nationality:British
Religion:Christianity
Spouse:Martha Sabrina Brinton
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James Geoffrey Gordon (11 December 1881 – 28 August 1938) was a priest and bishop in the Church of England.

Life

James Gordon was the son of J. E. H. Gordon, an early electrical engineer and Alice Mary Gordon (née Brandreth) later Lady Danesfort, an author and domestic electrical pioneer.[1] He was educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge. He was President of the Cambridge Union in 1902.

He was Private Secretary to Lord President of the Council 1904 - 1906. He was called to the Bar in 1906 but soon embarked on a change of direction. He was ordained in 1909, and served as a curate in London.[2] During the Great War, he was a Temporary Chaplain to the Forces (TCF), and was posted to France then Italy, ending the War as Deputy Assistant Chaplain-General. He wrote ‘Papers in Picardy’ with Reverend T W Pym DSO and contributed an essay to ‘The Church in the Furnace’ a critical view by TCFs of the Church's deficiencies in time of war.[3] From 1919 to 1926, he was Rector of St John's in Edinburgh and from 1926 to 1932 was Vicar of St Mary, Nottingham. He was appointed suffragan bishop of Jarrow in 1932 but died in August, 1938. His special responsibility throughout Durham but particularly in Jarrow was providing support during a severe period of unemployment causing considerable hardship. Although he did not believe that hunger marches were effective, he held a service for the Jarrow March and gave it his blessing.[4] After his death, the Bishop of Durham praised Gordon for ‘the cheery comradeship in effort, for the words of sympathy and wisdom, for the comfort of his presence, and for the spur of his example’.[5]

Gordon married Martha Sabrina Brinton In 1912.

References

  1. Book: Gooday, Graeme. Domesticating Electricity: Technology, Uncertainty and Gender, 1880-1914. 2015-07-22. Routledge. 978-1-317-31402-8. en.
  2. The Times obituary, 29.8.1938. Times Digital Archive. Web 8.6.2015.
  3. Index Card and information from Museum of Army Chaplaincy
  4. Church Times obituary, 2.9.1938
  5. University of Durham Barker Research Library. The Bishoprick, November, 1938.