Type: | Bishop |
Honorific Prefix: | The Right Reverend |
John Hazen White | |
Diocese: | Northern Indiana |
Elected: | 1899 |
Term: | 1899–1925 |
Retired: | --> |
Successor: | Campbell Gray |
Ordination: | May 28, 1876 |
Ordained By: | John Williams |
Consecration: | May 1, 1895 |
Consecrated By: | Daniel S. Tuttle |
Birth Date: | 10 March 1849 |
Buried: | St. James Memorial Chapel (Howe, Indiana) |
Nationality: | American |
Parents: | Moses Hazen White & Mary Miller Williams |
Spouse: | Marie Louise Holbrook |
Children: | 7 |
Previous Post: | Bishop of Indiana (1860-1865) |
Alma Mater: | Kenyon College |
John Hazen White (March 10, 1849 – March 16, 1925) was an episcopal bishop in Indiana and the first bishop of Northern Indiana in The Episcopal Church.[1]
White was born in Cincinnati, Ohio on March 10, 1849, the son of Moses Hazen White and Mary Miller Williams. He was educated at the public schools of Cincinnati, graduating from Woodward High in 1867. He then entered Kenyon College, from where he earned a Bachelor of Arts in 1872. In 1875, he graduated with a Bachelor of Divinity, after studying at Berkeley Divinity School.[2]
White was ordained deacon on June 4, 1875, and priest on May 28, 1876. He then became assistant rector of St Andrew's Church in Meriden, Connecticut, while in 1878 he became rector of Grace Church in Old Saybrook, Connecticut and in 1881 of Christ Church in Joliet, Illinois. He married Marie Louise Holbrook on April 23, 1879, and together had seven children.[3]
White was elected Bishop of Indiana on February 6, 1895, on the first ballot. He was consecrated on May 1, 1895, by Presiding Bishop Daniel S. Tuttle.[4] With the creation of the Diocese of Michigan City in 1898, White was elected to serve as its first bishop, where he was installed on April 25, 1899. In 1912, he took upon himself the rectorship of St James' Church in South Bend, Indiana, a post he retained till 1920. White died in office on March 16, 1925, in Seabreeze, Florida, where he had been spending the winter. He died as a result of a heart disease, followed a period of ill health.[5]