John Hedley (bishop) explained

Type:Bishop
Honorific-Prefix:The Right Reverend
John Cuthbert Hedley
Honorific-Suffix:O.S.B.
Bishop of Newport
Church:Roman Catholic
Archdiocese:Newport
Appointed:18 February 1881 (As Bishop of Newport and Menevia)
Term:1881–1915
Term Start:1881
Term End:11 November 1915
Predecessor:Joseph Brown
Ordination:19 October 1862
Ordained By:Robert Cornthwaite
Consecration:29 September 1873
Consecrated By:Henry Edward Manning
Rank:Bishop
Birth Date:1837 4, df=yes
Birth Place:Morpeth, Northumberland, England
Nationality:British
Previous Post:Auxiliary Bishop of Newport and Menevia (1873-1881)

John Cuthbert Hedley (15 April 1837 – 11 November 1915) was a British Benedictine and writer who held high offices in the Roman Catholic Church.

Born in Morpeth, Northumberland, he was the son of Dr. Edward Astley Hedley and Mary Ann (Davison) Hedley. He was educated at Mr Gibson's Grammar School and then at Ampleforth College.[1] He was professed a member of the Order of Saint Benedict in 1855 and ordained a priest of the order on 9 October 1862.

He was appointed an auxiliary bishop of Newport and Menevia and Titular Bishop of Caesaropolis on 22 July 1873. His consecration to the Episcopate took place on 29 September 1873, the principal consecrator was Archbishop (later Cardinal) Henry Edward Manning of Westminster, with bishops Brown and Chadwick as co-consecrators. Hedley acted as editor of the Dublin Review in the late 1870s. Prior to assuming the editorship, he had taught philosophy and theology for eleven years at Belmont Abbey, Herefordshire. As editor sought Headley to provide a forum for leading minds to infuse the spirit of Catholicism into literature, history, politics, and art..."[2]

Hedley was appointed the Bishop of the Diocese of Newport and Menevia on 18 February 1881. His episcopal title was changed to Bishop of Newport in 1895. He had served the people well, not least within the field of Catholic Education.[3]

He published a number of works:

Bishop Hedley died in office on 11 November 1915, aged 78. After his death, the see of Newport was elevated to an archdiocese and changed its name to Cardiff in 1916.

Legacy

Notes and References

  1. Hedley, Rt. Rev. John Cuthbert. Who's Who. 1907. 59. 815–816.
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=HhPG4Hm97mkC&dq=Dublin+Review+%28Catholic+periodical%29&pg=PA11 Houghton, Walter E., "The Dublin Review", The Wellesley Index to Victorian Periodicals 1824-1900, Routledge, 2013, p. 17
  3. https://rcadc2013.wordpress.com/tag/bishop-john-cuthbert-hedley/ "Archbishop George Rededicates Tomb of Predecessor", News -Archdiocese of Cardiff
  4. https://bishophedley.co.uk/ Bishop Hedley Catholic High School website